Individual Therapy in Marin County

Marin County can look like you've made it. The space, the beauty, the slower pace. But underneath that, there can be a quiet pressure to hold it all together. Even with the trails, the water, and the breathing room, life still brings seasons that are hard to navigate alone. I offer online therapy for adults in Marin who are ready to stop performing and start building a deeper understanding of themselves and the patterns that keep showing up.

Therapy that meets you where you are.

From the outside, life in Marin can look effortless. But the reality is more complicated. Maybe you're carrying stress you don't feel like you can talk about, navigating a relationship that's quietly unraveling, or sitting with a low hum of anxiety that doesn't match the life you've built. These are the kinds of things that bring people to therapy, and they're exactly what I work with.

I offer online therapy so you can show up to sessions from wherever feels most comfortable. Your living room in Mill Valley, your home office in San Rafael, or a quiet corner in Tiburon. No driving across the county, no rearranging your afternoon. Just a space that's yours.


Why online therapy works in Marin.

Finding a therapist in Marin who has availability, feels like the right fit, and doesn't require a 30-minute drive can be its own source of stress. Online therapy simplifies that. You get consistent, quality care without building your whole day around a single appointment.

Many of my clients in Marin find that showing up to therapy from their own space actually helps them be more open and reflective. There's something about being in a familiar environment that makes it easier to do this kind of work. Whether you're in Sausalito, Larkspur, Novato, or Corte Madera, you're welcome here.

What I help with.

I work with adults and young adults navigating a range of concerns, including:

  • You might look like you have it all together, but underneath there's a constant hum of worry that won't turn off. Maybe it's racing thoughts at night, the need to control every outcome, or a tightness in your chest that you've just learned to live with. Therapy can help you understand what's driving the anxiety and build a different relationship with it, so it stops running the show.

  • Sometimes it's obvious: you feel heavy, unmotivated, withdrawn. Other times it's subtler. You're going through the motions but nothing feels meaningful. You've lost interest in things you used to care about, or you just feel flat. We can work together to understand what's underneath and help you reconnect with yourself and your life in a way that actually feels real. If you're not sure whether what you're feeling is ordinary sadness or something more, I've written more about how to tell the difference.

  • Women's lives are shaped by experiences that deserve thoughtful, informed support at every stage. In your younger years, that might mean navigating body image, sexual identity, or the pressure to have it all figured out. Later, it could be fertility struggles, pregnancy loss, the emotional weight of IVF, or the adjustment to becoming a mother when it doesn't feel the way you expected it to. Perimenopause and menopause bring their own challenges that are too often dismissed: mood changes, anxiety that seems to come out of nowhere, shifts in identity and desire, grief over a changing body. And throughout all of it, there are the quieter ongoing pressures: balancing career and caregiving, relationship strain, burnout, and the tendency to put everyone else's needs before your own. I create a space where you can talk honestly about any of this without being told it's just a phase or just hormones. If you can related to the weight of the mental load that women carry, I've written more about that experience.

  • The way we learned to relate to people early in life tends to follow us into adulthood, often in ways we don't recognize until the same painful patterns keep repeating. Maybe you struggle to ask for what you need, or you find yourself in relationships where you give more than you get, or conflict feels unbearable. Therapy can help you see these patterns clearly and start making different choices.

  • You got into tech because you were excited about it. But somewhere along the way, the pace, the pressure, and the always-on culture started to wear you down. Maybe you're dreading work you used to love, running on fumes between sprints, or feeling like your entire identity has collapsed into your job title. Burnout in tech isn't a sign that you're not cut out for it. It's what happens when sustained pressure meets a person who keeps pushing through. Therapy can help you figure out what needs to change and how to move forward in a way that actually feels sustainable. If you're wondering whether what you're feeling is actually burnout or just a rough patch, I've written more about what to look for.

  • Your twenties and early thirties can feel like you're supposed to have it figured out while everything is actually shifting at once: identity, career, relationships, independence, family dynamics. I have extensive experience working with college students and young adults from my training at the University of San Francisco CAPS and Santa Clara University, and I understand the specific pressures of this stage of life. You don't need to be in crisis to benefit from having someone in your corner while you figure things out.

Curious if we're a good fit? Let's find out.