What We Treat
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
ADHD affects focus, impulse control, and organization, impacting work, school, and relationships. Many adults discover they have ADHD after years of struggling with productivity or feeling scattered. Treatment combines medication management with practical strategies to build skills and structure. Proper diagnosis and care can be transformative.
Depression
Depression is a persistent condition affecting mood, energy, and the ability to experience pleasure. It's more than temporary sadness—it can make everyday activities feel overwhelming. Treatment often includes therapy, medication, or both, and most people experience significant improvement with appropriate care.
Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety disorders involve excessive worry or fear that interferes with daily life, including generalized anxiety, panic disorder, and social anxiety. Physical symptoms like rapid heartbeat or difficulty breathing often accompany the distress. Treatment helps you build skills to manage worry and face fears in manageable steps.
OCD involves intrusive, unwanted thoughts and repetitive behaviors performed to reduce anxiety. The condition can be exhausting and time-consuming. Evidence-based treatment helps you learn to tolerate uncertainty and resist compulsive urges, significantly improving quality of life.
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
Personality disorders involve longstanding patterns of thinking and behaving that cause distress or relationship difficulties. Treatment focuses on developing insight, improving interpersonal skills, and building healthier coping strategies. With appropriate support, people can develop more flexible ways of relating to themselves and others.
Personality Disorders
Trauma profoundly impacts how you experience yourself, relationships, and the world. Whether from childhood experiences, abuse, neglect, or specific events, unresolved trauma can affect your emotional well-being, sense of safety, and ability to trust others. Treatment focuses on understanding how past experiences shape current patterns and building pathways to healing through trauma-informed medication management and therapy collaboration.
Trauma and Trauma-Related Disorders
Grief is a natural response to loss, but sometimes it becomes prolonged or complicated, interfering with your ability to function or move forward. You might feel stuck in your grief, unable to accept the loss, or experience intense symptoms of depression or anxiety. Treatment provides space to process your loss while addressing any psychiatric symptoms that have emerged. The goal isn't to "get over" your loss but to integrate it into your life in a way that allows you to continue living.
Grief and Loss
Difficulties in relationships often stem from early attachment experiences or patterns learned in childhood. You might find yourself repeatedly in unhealthy relationships, struggling with trust and intimacy, or feeling anxious about closeness and separation. While relationship issues aren't a psychiatric diagnosis per se, understanding them through an attachment and family systems lens can be deeply helpful. Treatment focuses on recognizing patterns, understanding their origins, and developing healthier ways of relating.
Relationship Issues and Attachment Difficulties
Chronic work stress and burnout can lead to exhaustion, cynicism, reduced performance, and symptoms of anxiety or depression. You might feel emotionally depleted, disconnected from your work, or unable to meet demands that once felt manageable. Treatment involves assessing whether underlying conditions like ADHD or anxiety are contributing, addressing acute symptoms, and helping you develop boundaries and coping strategies. Sometimes burnout signals the need for broader life changes.

