Individual Supervision
1:1 supervision/ consultation focused on your client work and development.
Fee: $170
RCC-ACS | Squamish, BC + Online Supervision Across BC & Beyond
Being a therapist is a steep learning curve.
Supervision is where you don’t have to climb it alone.
You’re doing meaningful work — and you’re largely doing it in a room by yourself. No one sees what happens in your sessions. No one knows the moment you weren’t sure what to say, or the client you keep thinking about after hours, or the quiet worry that you’re missing something.
That’s not a sign something is wrong. That’s just what this work feels like from the inside.
Supervision is where you bring all of that — where you get to think out loud with someone who is right there in it with you.
Based in Squamish, I see supervisees in person locally and from across the Sea to Sky corridor — and online for therapists throughout British Columbia and beyond.
Therapists come to supervision with different needs. Some come with a specific session or client in mind. Others aren’t quite sure what they need yet — and that’s fine too. Whatever you bring is welcome here. You don’t need to have it figured out before you arrive — that’s what we do together.
What tends to come up most:
→ The session you’re still thinking about — A moment where you weren’t sure what to say, or wondered about it after. We slow it down and look at what was happening in the client, in you, and between you.
→ Feeling stuck with a client — When sessions feel circular or you dread the appointment. We look at the patterns, not just the presenting problem.
→ Your reactions to clients — What comes up in you is information, not a problem. Learning to work with transference and countertransference — to use what you’re feeling rather than just manage it — is some of the most valuable work supervision can offer.
→ The quiet “am I actually good at this?” — Most therapists carry this. We can work with it honestly, not just reassure it away.
→ Learning to sit with not knowing — Those moments when you don’t know what to do next and the pull to fill the silence or reach for a technique is strong. Building the trust that something will come — that not knowing isn’t the same as failing — is some of the most important work supervision can support.
→ Seeing the whole person — It’s easy to get pulled into the presenting issue and lose sight of the bigger picture. We look at the patterns underneath — family dynamics, historical relationships, the ways your client has learned to protect themselves — so you’re working with the whole person, not just the problem they brought in.
→ Couples work — Learning not to get pulled toward one partner, holding the relationship as the client, and navigating the intensity couples bring.
→ Building your practice — The clinical and practical are connected. We can look at how you structure your work and sustain yourself in the long run.
I’ve been receiving supervision since 2010 and providing it to other therapists since 2016. What has shaped me most isn’t any particular model — it’s the experience of having a space where I felt held enough to figure out my own way.
For supervision to work, you need to feel safe enough to bring the real stuff — the moments you’re not proud of, the clients you’re worried about, the quiet doubts you don’t say out loud. That requires trust, and trust takes time. I don’t take that lightly.
Different therapists need different things — and the same therapist needs different things at different points. Sometimes that means more guidance and direction, especially early on. Sometimes it means sitting with something together without rushing to an answer. I offer ideas gently and check in about what’s actually useful — and I’d rather you tell me if something isn’t landing than sit with it quietly. We figure out what help looks like together.
The goal is to help you find your own way of being a therapist. Not to become a better version of someone else’s approach. Yours.
There’s a lot of pressure in this field to keep training — the next certification, the next model, the next thing that will finally make you feel like you know what you’re doing. That pressure is real, and the industry around it is significant. Some training is genuinely worth it. But no model is going to give you the certainty you’re looking for — though plenty will charge you a lot to try.
Having some kind of framework to orient from is useful, especially early on. But the model that actually speaks to you might not be the most expensive or the most well-marketed one — it’s worth looking around before spending too much.
The deeper truth is that therapy is a wicked learning environment — one where feedback is delayed, outcomes are uncertain, and the rules seem to change with every client. The doubt and uncertainty most therapists carry isn’t a sign something is wrong. It’s just the landscape. Learning to tolerate the not knowing is part of the work — and one of the things supervision can genuinely help with.
1:1 supervision/ consultation focused on your client work and development.
Fee: $170
Attend with a colleague and split the cost while learning together.
Fee: $170 ($85 each)
Co-led Relational Supervision/ Consultation Group (learn more)
Fee: $100
All supervision and consultation is available in person in Squamish and online across BC and beyond.
If any of this resonates, I’d love to hear from you. You don’t have to figure this out alone — that’s exactly what supervision is for.
Step 1 — Book a supervision or consultation session, or schedule a complimentary no-obligation phone consult.
Step 2 — We’ll talk about what you’re hoping for and make sure it feels like a good fit.
Have questions? Email me.