Everyone deserves to feel “at home”. We believe that therapy should be accessible and translatable to the way one dwells. Bringing psychotherapy into the home gives us the opportunity to help clients shape for the better an environment that often profoundly influences feelings of safety, comfort, and love. We aim to collaborate with clients, to draw upon their inherent resilience and resources and let go of what is in their way, in real time, in the environment in which they experience it. Together we can rebuild or redesign the emotional foundation of the home and cultivate new ways to relate to one another. 

Below we have compiled a list of common home-based issues that individuals and families may experience. If your particular need or challenge is not listed, please contact us to see if in-home therapy may be an appropriate fit for you or your family.

In-Home

Early Childhood

  • Maternal postpartum depression, anxiety, and baby blues

  • Parent/infant relationship 

  • Bonding challenges 

  • Sleep and feeding routines

  • Toilet training

School Aged

  • Homework and school-related challenges

  • Learning challenges

  • Executive Functioning challenges and ADHD

  • Worries and fears

  • Interpersonal conflicts 

  • Relationships with challenging children

  • Daily routines

  • Life transitions

Identity Development

  • L.G.B.T.Q.I.A.+ support and education

  • Family Transitions (adapting to divorce, separation, step-parent, step-siblings)

  • Adolescence 

  • Elder Care decisions and life transitions

  • Processing recent diagnoses 

  • Grief support

Parenting

  • Mediating sibling and other family conflicts

  • Communication and effective problem solving 

  • Understanding child development

  • Processing recent diagnoses

  • Conflicting parenting styles

  • Setting empathic and firm boundaries

Palliative Care & Home-based Support

  • Palliative support

  • End-of-life conversations

  • End-of-life family conflicts

  • Routines and structures around activities of daily living (ADLs) and cognitive shifts

  • Home de-cluttering and moving (associated with emotional strain and/or chronic mental health challenges)

  • Chronic health issues that interfere with leaving the home