Is faith important to you?

I integrate faith into therapy for those who want it—and keep it out for those who don't.

The majority of my clients seek me out specifically because I'm a Christian trauma therapist. For them, healing happens within a biblical framework: we explore how faith intersects with pain, we may pray together, and we use biblical truths as anchors during the hardest parts of processing.

But I also work with clients who aren't Christian or who don't find faith relevant to their healing. If that's you, we won't bring religion into our sessions unless you ask.

What Christian Counseling Looks Like Here

It's not about slapping Bible verses on your problems. It's not about telling you to "pray more." It's not about bypassing the real psychological work with platitudes.

It's about recognizing that for many people, faith is the deepest part of their identity—and trauma often damages our relationship with God as much as it damages our relationships with others or ourselves.

Christian counseling in my practice means:

  • Processing spiritual wounds alongside psychological ones

  • Exploring how your understanding of God has been shaped by trauma

  • Using biblical frameworks for reframing negative beliefs (e.g., "I'm unworthy" vs. "I'm fearfully and wonderfully made")

  • Incorporating prayer and biblical meditation when it serves your healing

  • Helping you untangle theology from trauma so you can rebuild authentic faith

This is deep work. It requires the same willingness to learn, to be honest, to get uncomfortable. If you're using faith as a way to avoid looking at the hard stuff—if you're hoping I'll tell you to "just trust God more" instead of doing actual trauma work—we won't work well together.

But if you want to integrate your whole self—faith, pain, hope, fear—into the healing process? That's where transformation happens.


When to Seek Help

You may benefit from therapy if you're experiencing:

  • Anxiety that interferes with daily life

  • Panic attacks or fear of panic

  • Trauma symptoms: flashbacks, nightmares, hypervigilance

  • Feeling stuck in patterns you can't seem to break

  • Relationships that keep falling into the same dynamics

  • A sense that you're performing rather than living

  • Disconnection from your faith or spiritual struggle

But here's the real question: Are you willing to learn new ways of being, even when they feel unnatural at first? Are you willing to discover things about yourself that might be uncomfortable? Are you willing to practice honesty even when it's scary?

If yes—schedule a consultation.


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