Therapy for Cultural Tension

You've Spent Your Whole Life Trying to Belong. And You're Exhausted.

You’ve learned to read the room. To adjust, soften, translate yourself. To be one version of you at home and another everywhere else. You’ve gotten good at it. And somewhere in all that adapting, you lost track of which version is actually you.

You might recognize some of this:

You’re not too sensitive. You’re not failing. You’re carrying something real, and you’ve been carrying it for a long time.

A person sitting on a swing by the ocean, black and white photography capturing solitude.
Laughing multiracial female colleagues wearing uniform flipping pages of papers while discussing work together

What working together
might look like

We start where you are, without assumptions about what your experience should look like or what healing should mean for you.

I won’t ask you to explain your culture from scratch. I won’t assume that what you’re carrying is purely internal, because some of it isn’t. Some of it is the very real weight of navigating systems and societal expectations. Both things can be true at once, and both deserve space in the room.

As a first generation immigrant myself, I bring genuine understanding to this work, not as something I disclose to make you comfortable, but as something that quietly shapes how I listen, what I notice, and what I know doesn’t need explaining.

Through expressive arts and somatic approaches, we find ways to access what’s underneath the adapting, the performing, the trying to fit in. We make room for the parts of you that have been quieter than they should be. And we work at your pace, following what you need most in each session.

What becomes possible

Not belonging everywhere. But belonging to yourself.

Clients describe starting to know the difference between what's actually theirs and what was handed to them,

by family, by culture, by a world that asked them to be smaller than they are. That distinction, small at first, changes things. They describe finding their voice again. Not a louder version of the adjusted self, but something quieter and steadier underneath.
A sense of knowing who they are that doesn't depend on which room they're in. The complexity of living between worlds doesn't disappear. What changes is that it stops feeling like something is wrong with you for finding it hard. The hard weeks don't disappear. What changes is that they stop feeling like evidence that you're not enough.

You don’t have to keep carrying this alone. Schedule a free 20-minute consultation to see how we might work together.