Licensed Depth Therapy in Minneapolis—St. Paul
Therapy That Reaches Beneath the Symptoms
Integrative depth-oriented work that engages both conscious insight and the deeper patterns underneath.
What Integrative Depth Therapy Means
“Integrative” means I draw from multiple psychological traditions rather than following a single technique or manual. The work adapts to the person in front of me.
“Depth” means we look beneath symptoms to the motivations, emotional dynamics, and learned patterns that shape them. Instead of focusing only on symptom reduction, we examine the underlying structures of the pattern with compassion and curiosity, including the protective strategies and survival responses that keep it in place.
Insight is important, but understanding alone is rarely enough. We also work experientially, allowing new responses to be felt and practiced in real time so change isn’t just conceptual, it becomes embodied.
This approach allows space for complexity and ambiguity. It is intentional enough to provide direction and results, and flexible enough to follow what unfolds.
How Change Happens
In this model, change is not forced, it reorganizes.
We examine how a pattern developed, what it protects, and what continues to reinforce it. We bring awareness to both the conscious narrative and the deeper structures organizing this response.
Some sessions focus on clarity and reflection. Others engage immediate emotional experience, embodied responses, or internal conflicts as they emerge in real time.
Some sessions are quiet and analytical; others move slowly and stay with what's hard to name.
The work adapts to what presents itself while staying oriented toward loosening entrenched patterns and strengthening internal regulation.
The aim is not suppression, but structural change.
“Nothing ever goes away until it has taught us what we need to know.”
-Pema Chödrön
Working at More Than One Level
Much of what shapes behavior operates outside of conscious awareness.
We work with both what you can articulate and what your system has learned through repetition and experience. That includes thoughts and beliefs, but also emotional responses, embodied reactions, and conditioned patterns.
At times, this involves experiential methods that allow deeper responses to shift directly, sometimes including Clinical Hypnosis (also called Hypnotherapy), so change is not just understood but lived.
Nothing is imposed. The work is collaborative, paced to what feels right, and oriented to what change you're actually after.
A Good Fit if You:
Are open to both insight and experiential work.
Value psychological depth, nuance, and a collaborative process rather than a strictly manualized model.
Want meaningful change rather than symptom management.
It may feel less aligned if you prefer a strictly cognitive or skills-based approach.
Change That Reaches Deeper
This work is grounded, focused, and confidential.
Reach out to schedule a free 20 minute consultation.