Compassionate Trauma Therapy in NYC
What Is Trauma?
Trauma is the lasting imprint of an experience that overwhelmed your ability to cope at the time. It isn’t defined by the event itself, but by how your mind and body had to adapt to survive it. That’s why two people can go through the same thing and be affected very differently.
This May Feel Familiar
Trauma can affect almost every part of daily life. You might recognize yourself in some of these:
- Anxiety, panic, or a constant sense of being on edge
- Intrusive memories, flashbacks, or nightmares
- Trouble sleeping, or feeling easily triggered by things that seem small to others
- Tension, fatigue, or physical pain without a clear medical cause
- Feeling numb, disconnected from your body, or going through life on autopilot
- Difficulty regulating emotions, or reacting more intensely than the situation calls for
- A harsh inner critic and a deep sense of shame or not being enough
- Difficulty trusting others, or pulling away when people get close
- Repeating the same painful patterns in relationships, work, or family
Wherever you’re coming from, what you carry is real, and it is workable.
How I Work With Trauma
Trauma is rarely something we can simply think our way through. It often needs to be felt, witnessed, and gently moved through in the safety of a relationship, in a way that respects how much you can hold at any given moment. My work is designed to meet trauma where it actually lives, carefully and at a pace your body can trust.
My approach to trauma is bottom-up, experiential, emotion-focused, and integrative. Bottom-up means we work with what trauma actually lives in: the body, the nervous system, and the emotions that were once too overwhelming to fully feel. Rather than trying to think our way out of trauma, we work gently with what your body is already holding, so that healing happens at a level deeper than insight alone can reach. This approach is grounded in current understanding of how trauma is stored neurobiologically, and in the recognition that real change tends to happen through experience, not just understanding.
Within this framework, I draw on several evidence-based modalities, including AEDP, EMDR, EFT, IFS, somatic approaches, and psychodynamic work. I integrate them flexibly based on what your nervous system and your story call for, rather than applying any single fixed protocol.
Underneath all of this is a simple premise supported by what we now understand about neuroplasticity: the patterns trauma left in you are not permanent. With the right kind of attention, in the context of a trusting therapeutic relationship, the brain can form new pathways. Over time, what once felt unbearable can become something you are able to carry differently, and eventually, something that no longer runs your life.
Trauma Therapy for Chinese & Asian American Adults
What Trauma Therapy Can Help With
- PTSD and trauma-related stress reactions
- Complex / childhood trauma and C-PTSD
- Intergenerational and cultural trauma
- A relentless inner critic, perfectionism, and the reflex to please
- Trouble managing emotions: feeling overwhelmed and easily flooded, or shut down and numb
- Anxiety, difficulty trusting, and recurring relational pain
Logistics
Sessions. Sessions are 45 minutes, typically held weekly. Some clients meet twice a week for deeper work.
In-person and online. I see clients both at my office in Manhattan and online over Zoom, available to clients located anywhere in New York State.
Fees and insurance. The fee is $175 per session. I am an out-of-network (OON) provider and do not bill insurance directly. I can provide a monthly superbill that you can submit to your insurance for possible reimbursement, with the amount varying by plan.
Sliding scale. A limited number of sliding scale spots are available. If cost feels like a barrier, please bring it up during our consultation. I’d rather have an honest conversation than have it quietly stand in the way.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if what I experienced counts as trauma?
What kind of trauma therapy do you offer in NYC?
Do you work with Chinese and Asian American clients specifically?
Will trauma therapy make me relive the worst moments?
How long does trauma therapy take?
Begin When You’re Ready
You don’t have to have the right words, and you don’t have to carry this alone. If something in you is quietly asking for support, that’s enough to start.
