“We need to tell our stories, not simply to heal, but to reshape the world we thought we had to survive.”

— Aurora Levins Morales

Exploration and Reclamation of Identity

If you're feeling the quiet ache of not quite belonging—caught between cultures, faiths, or generations—you might be in the right place.

Maybe you’ve begun to question the beliefs you were raised with, the roles you were expected to inhabit, or the values handed down through family or community. Perhaps you’re holding the complexity of a multicultural, multiethnic, interfaith, or blended family—your own or the one you grew up in—and trying to make sense of where you fit within all of it.

You may be grieving the loss of a spiritual home, navigating the rupture of religious disillusionment or exclusion, and wondering how to reclaim a self that still feels true. These moments of unraveling—though disorienting—can also be invitations.

In our work together, we’ll make room for the courage of stepping outside inherited narratives, and the beauty of living at the crossroads of culture. We won’t rush to define who you are—instead, we’ll stay curious about who you’re becoming. When you’re lost in the unknown, therapy becomes a space to tend to that uncertainty with care and compassion.

My approach is rooted in cultural and intercultural psychologies, but also informed by the deeper currents that shape meaning across generations—African-Centered wisdom, Buddhist psychology, Māori and Pacific storytelling traditions, and the teachings of Sufi mystics, Taoist flow, Confucian ethics, and Stoic clarity. These aren’t abstract ideas—they are living ways of navigating change, contradiction, and becoming.

Together, we’ll explore what parts of your story feel unfinished, what identities have been silenced, and what longings are asking to be heard now. You don’t need to resolve every contradiction to be whole. You just need space to be fully seen.