Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy

(Offered in partnership with Journey Clinical)

“An innovative path toward healing, guided by presence and care.”

Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy (KAP) can support those experiencing depression, anxiety, trauma, or feeling emotionally stuck—especially when other modalities haven’t quite reached the root.
This work is gentle, spacious, and grounded in somatic integration and relational attunement.

What is KAP?

KAP is a therapeutic approach that combines the use of ketamine—a legal, safe, and fast-acting medicine—with psychotherapy.
I partner with Journey Clinical, a collaborative medical team that provides medical intake, prescription, and at-home lozenge delivery when appropriate.

Together, we create a safe, intentional space for preparation, medicine sessions, and integration.

My Approach

As a somatic and attachment-based therapist, I weave KAP into a larger arc of healing:

  • Nervous system regulation

  • Inner child work & trauma integration

  • Movement and body-based awareness

  • Support through psychedelic states with intention and care

This is not a “quick fix,” but rather a doorway into deeper connection—with yourself, your history, and your healing.

Is this for you?

KAP may be supportive if you're navigating:
• Depression or anxiety
• PTSD or developmental trauma
• Spiritual or existential distress
• Creative or emotional blockages
• Feeling stuck, numbed out, or ready for something deeper

The Process

  1. Initial Discovery Call
    To assess alignment, answer questions, and explore intentions

  2. Medical Intake via Journey Clinical
    (You’ll meet with a prescriber to determine eligibility)

  3. Preparation Sessions with Me
    To build safety, set intentions, and attune to your body

  4. Ketamine Sessions
    Held virtually, in partnership with prescribed lozenges

  5. Integration Sessions
    Where the real work unfolds—reflecting, feeling, embodying

    If you feel called to this work, let’s connect. I’d be honored to explore it with you.

 “There are medicines that open doors, but the integration is where we learn to walk through them with grace.”