Therapy for Therapists

Support for the human behind the clinician.

Being a therapist is deeply meaningful work—but it can also be emotionally demanding in ways that are difficult for others to fully understand.

Every day, therapists hold space for grief, trauma, uncertainty, and the complexities of other people’s lives. Over time, that level of emotional presence can take a toll. Many clinicians find themselves navigating burnout, self-doubt, or the quiet pressure to always have the answers.

Therapy offers a place where you don’t have to be the one holding it all together.

In our work together, you can speak openly about both the personal and professional realities of being a therapist, without needing to translate or explain the field.

Why Therapy for Therapists Can Be Helpful

Even experienced clinicians benefit from having their own therapeutic space.

Therapists often carry unique stressors that aren’t always visible from the outside, including:

The emotional impact of sitting with trauma, grief, and suffering day after day
Burnout and compassion fatigue
Navigating complex client dynamics and countertransference
Imposter syndrome and professional self-doubt
Isolation that can come with private practice or solo clinical work
Ethical gray areas or difficult clinical decisions
Balancing personal needs with the responsibility of caring for others
Stressors managing entrepreneurship and financial uncertainty

Therapy provides a place to slow down, reflect, and reconnect with your own wellbeing, so that the work remains sustainable over time.

A Different Kind of Therapy Space

Working with a therapist who understands the profession can make a meaningful difference.

You won’t need to explain the structure of clinical work, the realities of holding risk, or the emotional nuance of therapeutic relationships. Instead, we can focus on the deeper layers of what you’re experiencing.

This might include:

Processing the emotional weight of the work in a supportive, embodied way
Exploring professional identity and career direction
Navigating boundaries between personal and professional roles
Reconnecting with the parts of yourself that exist outside the therapist role

This space is not about evaluating your clinical work. It is about supporting you as a human being who happens to be a therapist.

When Therapists Reach Out

Therapists often seek their own therapy when they are:

Feeling burned out or emotionally exhausted
Questioning their path in the profession
Navigating a difficult client or professional situation
Going through personal transitions such as parenthood, loss, or relationship changes
Wanting a reflective space to support their growth as both a person and a clinician

You don’t have to be in crisis to benefit from therapy. Many therapists simply want a place where they can show up honestly and be supported.