Hi there! My name is Andrea, and if you are looking for an empathetic and supportive space for healing and recovery, then you’re in the right place.
When I first decided I wanted to be a therapist, I wanted to work with adolescents, specifically in treating eating disorders. However, once I started working with adults in higher levels of care for eating disorder treatment - many of them parents - I felt drawn to working with this population.
I noticed many of these individuals would often come back to treatment. Even though the majority of these people developed effective coping skills while in treatment, going back to their environment - where their eating disorders thrived, and where little to nothing changed while they were away - led to a relapse, and an eventual return to a higher level of care.
Which brings me to The Upstream Analogy: a way to think about the importance of prevention (Why are people falling in the river?), rather than solely focusing on the people who are already drowning downstream. What could prevention be like with eating disorders, trauma, and perinatal mental health?
I noticed in my work with adolescents how frustrated I felt with parents. Most times, parents are willing to make necessary changes for the better of their child’s recovery. Far too often, though, other parents are not. Trying to recover in a family system that will not change can feel impossible.
What I noticed in my work with adults through my private psychotherapy practice is that people who came to me for therapy wanted to work on their own recovery as new parents, or even before becoming parents. They wanted to stop unhelpful generational cycles, and to create a more positive experience for themselves as parents and for their children.
This is where I believe the most important work can happen: to help people make necessary changes in their lives, and to heal from past wounds and traumas, so that they can help prevent falling into the river - a cycle that may have been repeated in past generations, but one that can end with you.
By focusing on the parenting community - individuals who can be the change makers - we can work together to break generational cycles of trauma and abuse, and create a better and more beautiful life for parents and their children.
This is where our work together comes in. The fact that you are already here is a sign you are a change maker; you want to be brave and break unhelpful generational cycles - not just for yourself but also for generations to come. This work will not be easy, but I promise you this work will be worth it.