Couples Therapy

Let’s not focus on the issue, let’s find the root of it.

My Style of Couples Therapy

Couples therapy with me and my team of clinicians is not about sitting in a room rehashing the same arguments you’ve had at home. My approach is direct, accountability-oriented, and results-driven. I believe your relationship—not just each partner—is my client. That means our sessions focus on strengthening the connection between you, improving communication, and breaking destructive patterns, rather than assigning blame.

I combine warmth and compassion with a “shoot-from-the-hip” style that cuts through surface-level talk. Many couples come to me after trying traditional therapy that felt validating but unproductive. In my practice, you’ll leave sessions with clear tools, strategies, and homework to create lasting change.

How We’re Different from Other Practices

  • Accountability Meets Compassion: Many therapists validate feelings, but don’t push for growth. In our practice, we balance empathy with accountability so you actually move forward.

  • Specialized Expertise: Alongside general relationship issues, we specialize in sex therapy, infertility, women’s hormone health, and intimacy after major life transitions—areas many practices overlook.

  • Focused on Results: Couples often report that they feel real progress within just a few sessions, rather than months of circling the same arguments.

  • Team of Experts: Our group practice includes clinicians trained in different specialties, ensuring that if your relationship needs a specific focus, we have someone skilled to help.

Common Reasons Couples Seek Therapy Here

  • Constant fighting or communication breakdown

  • Feeling more like roommates than partners

  • Lack of sex, sexual desire or sexual connection

  • Lost sexual attraction and sexual confidence

  • Rebuilding after infidelity or betrayal

  • Mismatched desire or sexual concerns

  • Infertility, pregnancy, or postpartum stress

  • Navigating big life transitions (career, parenthood, relocation)

  • Strengthening intimacy in long-term relationships

“I’m not here to talk about the recent fight you had, I want to understand what you’re fighting for so I can help you understand each other better.”