My psychotherapeutic work is about helping people feel comfortable, autonomous and productive in the real world. For almost 30 years, as a NYC-base therapist, I have enriched the lives of patients though my unique approach that blends the bedrock clinical theory with pragmatic idea, compassion and warmth.
Newhouse Psychotherapy was founded as a private psychotherapy practice, working with individual, families, couples and treating patients in a broad array of context, including coping with grief, anxiety, depression, trauma, chronic pain, post-traumatic stress disorder, substance abuse, and negotiating the complexities of aging. In addition, I work in corporate setting both nationally and internationally, addressing the workplace dynamics and issues that surround achieving a work-life balance.
I was one of the select number of counselors at the front lines aiding witnesses to the 9-11 terror attacks. Newhouse Psychology was called upon to work with hospital healthcare providers during the height of the Pandemic. In addition to working in clinical setting treating traumatically brain injured patents, and chemically dependent adolescents and adults. My in intuition, empathy, active engagement, and humanness create a secure safe and replaced environment to explore life’s complexities and personal struggles.
My relational skills and rigorous and continued academic grounding equip me with a broad array of tools to use in treatment. There isn’t a one-size-fits-all approach to Newhouse Psychotherapy. Let’s say five different people come to Newhouse Psychotherapy with the same issue, that issue is filtered through gender, culture, age, sexual orientation and other factors. We sort these factors out and help the patient understand the issue through grounding them in reality and helping them make sense of the variable coloring of their perceptions.
I began my professional life in the world of broadcasting, logging in 20 years working in many facets of the industry. The importance lesson from that experience of the absolute importance of listening. My first work as a therapist was treating the developmentally disable and their families at inpatient facilities before I started my private practice. Currently, I maintain a thriving private practice with a diverse cross-section of patients.