Inclusivity
Therapy isn't neutral. Healing doesn't happen in a vacuum. My work is rooted in difference, not just tolerating it but genuinely celebrating it. This isn't a box-tick. It's a practice, and I review it regularly.
I offer inclusive services that actively affirm trans, queer, neurodivergent, racialised and disabled identities, grounded in anti-racist, anti-capitalist and decolonial awareness. I hold awareness of my own privilege living in a white, more-or-less-able body. I have blind spots, and I'm committed to ongoing learning and accountability. This page is not static, and I welcome feedback from those most impacted by systems of exclusion.
Therapy is not just about self-acceptance. It's about collective liberation.
Anti-Racist Practice
I am white, and I benefit in countless ways from that. I live and work in a world shaped by colonisation and white supremacy, and therapy is not separate from those histories.
I aim to practise anti-racism through reflection, repair and action: amplifying global majority voices, questioning white-centred norms, and staying open to feedback and change.
Disability, Neurodivergence & Access
I don't pathologise difference. Neurodivergence, disability and chronic illness are part of natural human diversity.
I'm neurodivergent myself, AuDHD, and that shapes how I practise: flexibly, gently, with space for pacing, sensory needs and nonlinear ways of working. I know that no two neurodivergent people are the same. I don't assume to understand your experience, but I do welcome you and respect your neurology.
Trans and Queer Inclusion
I stand with trans and queer folks. Always.
As someone who is gender expansive, I know the deep discomfort of never feeling at home in the gender assigned at birth. I don't pretend to understand everyone's story, but I honour the truth in each one. I experience the pain of being misgendered or presumed cis-het, even as I benefit from the privilege of cis-het passing. Both are real, and both shape how I show up in this work.
I honour the work of early feminists, and I feel deep grief that some have turned their pain outward onto trans and nonbinary people, and especially the harm this does to trans kids and young people. My feminism is rooted in expansion, care and complexity, not fear or exclusion.
Nature doesn't do binaries. It has always been fluid, queer, messy. Transness is not an exception to nature. It's part of it. In all my work, trans and queer people are affirmed and welcomed without condition.