
Understanding, Acceptance, and Change
California Telehealth Therapy
About
Raised across the U.S., Japan, Trinidad, and Argentina, I understand the complexity of cultural transitions and how grounding support can make all the difference during uncertain times.
My therapeutic approach is warm, flexible, and tailored to your unique needs—whether you're seeking short-term solutions or deeper emotional insight. I integrate evidence-based treatments like Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Compassion Focused Therapy, Mindfulness, and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), as well as longer-term, relationally-based therapy.
I earned my B.A. in Psychology from Stanford University and my Psy.D. from Loyola University Maryland. My training includes community mental health, college counseling centers, and the Baltimore and Sepulveda VA systems, where I specialized in trauma-informed care, health psychology, and neuropsychological assessment.
With over 15 years of experience, including a decade at UCLA Counseling and Psychological Services (where I also served as Assistant Training Director), I’ve supported individuals facing a wide range of emotional challenges, with a specialty in anxiety and OCD. I’ve also supervised and trained future clinicians in evidence-based treatment.
Whether you're navigating transitions, managing stress, or looking to build a stronger relationship with yourself, we’ll work together to find the right path forward. My goal is to help you gain insight, build practical skills, and create lasting change.
If you're ready to feel more grounded and empowered, I’m here to help. Reach out to schedule a session or learn more.
Specialty Services
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Exposure-Based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Anxiety
A central approach in CBT for anxiety is exposure therapy, which helps individuals gradually confront feared situations or bodily sensations in a structured and safe manner. By doing so, the aim is to reduce fear responses over time. Exposure can take several forms:
In vivo exposure: Directly facing real-life feared situations.
Imaginal exposure: Vividly imagining feared scenarios.
Interoceptive exposure: Intentionally bringing on physical sensations linked to anxiety.
Often, these exercises are organized using a “fear hierarchy,” where challenges begin with less distressing situations and gradually build toward more difficult ones. The ultimate purpose is to weaken the connection between fear and the trigger, encourage new learning, and increase resilience.
How Exposure Therapy Helps
Habituation: Repeated exposure without harmful outcomes reduces the intensity of the anxiety response.
Inhibitory Learning: The brain forms a new, more balanced understanding of the feared situation, which replaces the old fear-based association.
Emotional Regulation: Individuals practice sitting with discomfort and anxiety until it naturally subsides, instead of avoiding it.
Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) is a highly effective form of exposure therapy used to treat obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). It involves confronting anxiety-provoking situations while resisting the urge to carry out compulsive behaviors, thereby breaking the cycle of fear and compulsion.
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Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) is a structured, short-term psychological treatment designed to help people with persistent sleep difficulties. Research has shown it to be highly effective in improving sleep quality and reducing dependence on sleep aids.
The approach works by addressing the unhelpful thoughts and behaviors that fuel insomnia, including:
Sleep habits: Examples include inconsistent bedtimes, excessive time spent in bed, screen use before sleeping, or frequent daytime naps.
Conditioned arousal: When the bedroom becomes linked with wakefulness and frustration rather than relaxation and rest.
Unhelpful thinking patterns: For instance, worrying that sleep will never come or believing one is inherently “bad” at sleeping.
Treatment usually consists of 5–10 sessions, during which we practice techniques to:
Strengthen sleep routines: Setting a consistent sleep-wake schedule, creating a calming pre-bedtime ritual, and limiting time spent in bed to only sleep and rest.
Reshape thoughts about sleep: Recognizing and challenging negative or exaggerated beliefs about sleep and replacing them with more balanced perspectives.
Manage arousal and anxiety: Using relaxation methods and strategies to calm the mind and body so that worries don’t interfere with falling or staying asleep.
Studies consistently show that CBT-I improves both sleep quality and duration, enhances overall well-being, and often allows people to cut back on or stop using sleep medications.
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Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is a form of psychotherapy that focuses on building psychological flexibility and guiding individuals toward living in ways that reflect personal values. Extensive research supports ACT as an effective therapy for improving symptoms, quality of life, and psychological flexibility.
How ACT Works:
We collaborate to help you:Clarify and connect with your values
Learn mindfulness practices to stay grounded in the present
Accept and make space for difficult experiences instead of avoiding them
Take meaningful action toward goals, even when discomfort is present
Benefits of ACT include:
Reducing symptoms of anxiety, depression, and stress
Supporting management of chronic health conditions
Increasing resilience, adaptability, and overall well-being
Encouraging personal growth, self-acceptance, and value-driven living
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Compassion-Focused Therapy (CFT) is a therapeutic approach developed by Paul Gilbert that integrates ideas from Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), evolutionary psychology, neuroscience, and mindfulness practices. Its core aim is to help individuals replace self-criticism with self-compassion, fostering emotional balance, resilience, and well-being.
Key Features:
Integrated framework: Draws on CBT, mindfulness, guided imagery, and self-talk.
Self-compassion focus: Encourages a kinder, more supportive relationship with oneself.
Balancing systems: Works to calm the brain’s “threat system” by strengthening the “soothing system,” promoting feelings of safety and acceptance.
How It Works:
Develops inner warmth and safeness through compassion-based exercises.
Uses mindfulness and imagery practices to increase emotional awareness.
Shifts your relationship with yourself from self-attack to self-support.
Benefits and Applications:
Reduces self-criticism, shame, and perfectionism.
Enhances mood regulation, lowers distress, and supports emotional resilience.
Shown to be effective for anxiety, depression, trauma, PTSD, eating disorders, and even psychosis.
Fees & Insurance
All sessions are conducted via a telehealth platform and last 50-minutes in length.
Initial Consultation: No fee
Individual therapy sessions: $275
I do not take insurance. However, I can provide a "superbill" for out-of-network reimbursement (Consult your insurance regarding the reimbursement amount.)
Contact Me
Interested in working together? Fill out the following information and we can set up a time to talk by phone to determine if we are mutually a good fit.
Please note that digital correspondence is not a confidential form of communication, so please do not include any sensitive content in this form. I am happy to answer any questions you may have during our call.
I look forward to hearing from you!