You're Not Confused About Your Client. You're Caught in Their Field.
The hardest cases don't just challenge your clinical skills, they pull you in. Something activates: urgency, a particular flatness, the impulse to rescue, a helplessness you recognize but can't place. If you can't locate it and name it, it runs the session without your permission.
That's not a failure of technique. That's countertransference, and in the right frame it's not interference. It's the most precise clinical information available to you in the room.
I consult with therapists on difficult cases with a focus on using what's activating in you as clinical data, not something to suppress or manage, but a window into what's showing up for your client.
Case Conceptualization and Framework
When your interventions have stopped landing or the clinical story has gotten murky, we rebuild the map. We look at what's organizing this presentation underneath the symptoms and how to reorient in a way that's theoretically coherent and practically useful.
Parts Work and Countertransference
We get specific. Not "I feel pulled to rescue" but which part of you rescues, what it's protecting, and what it's afraid will happen if it doesn't. Then we look at how to use that activation as a window into your client rather than something to manage around.
AI Integration for Clinicians
Ethical, practical guidance for integrating AI tools into your practice. I use them in my own work and know what actually holds up clinically and professionally.