Break free from constant stress, exhaustion, and pressure. Build a version of success that actually feels sustainable.
Meet your licensed psychologist specializing in mental health care for high-achieving women seeking support for anxiety, burnout, perfectionism, and major life transitions
Burnout is increasingly common among high-achieving women, particularly those in demanding careers, graduate programs, and leadership roles where expectations are consistently high and often unrelenting. Many are balancing multiple responsibilities while holding themselves to elevated standards, which can make it difficult to step back or recognize when their capacity has been exceeded. Burnout is typically defined as a state of ongoing emotional, mental, and physical exhaustion that develops from prolonged and unmanaged stress. It often includes feeling depleted, becoming more detached or disengaged, and experiencing a reduced sense of effectiveness, even in areas where you have previously felt confident and capable.
(She/Her)

Being a high-achieving woman often feels like carrying significant responsibility, holding yourself to high standards, and continuing to show up for others even during moments when it feels difficult to show up for yourself.
Whether you are beginning therapy for the first time or returning with new experiences, I hope to create a space where you can feel safe, understood, supported, and empowered. A space where you can step out of constant pressure and self-doubt, reconnect with yourself, and grow into the person you want to become while creating a life that feels meaningful, fulfilling, and aligned with what matters most to you.
My goal is to help you build on your strengths, deepen your self-trust, and expand your capacity to navigate challenges with greater clarity, mental flexibility, and self-compassion. You may have spent much of your life being the one others rely on, and therapy can be a space where you no longer have to carry everything alone.
I recognize that finding a psychologist who feels like the right fit is an important part of this process. To help you decide whether working with me is the right fit, I provided information below to help you get a sense of who I am, my approach to therapy, and what working together might feel like, so you can make an informed decision about your mental health care.
Burnout in high-achieving professionals often shows up in ways that are easy to miss. You may still be functioning, meeting expectations, and getting things done, but internally you feel overwhelmingly exhausted. Instead of falling apart, burnout often looks like pushing through while running on empty. Over time, it can build gradually, showing up in emotional, physical, and behavioral ways that start to affect your well-being, focus, and day-to-day life.
Persistent sadness or feeling emotionally drained
Increased irritability, frustration, or impatience
Loss of motivation or sense of purpose
Feeling disconnected from your work or daily life
Increased self-criticism or feeling like you’re never doing enough
Chronic fatigue or low energy (even after rest)
Frequent headaches, muscle tension, or body aches
Sleep disturbances or insomnia
Difficulty relaxing or feeling “wired but tired”
Frequent illness or lowered immunity
Withdrawing from social activities or relationships
Decreased performance at work or home
Increased mistakes, forgetfulness, or difficulty concentrating
Overworking or difficulty stopping, even when exhausted
Procrastination or avoidance despite high standards
Burnout in high-achieving women often develops gradually because the very behaviors that lead to success are reinforced over time. Patterns like overworking, pushing through chronic stress, and holding yourself to high standards or perfectionism are often rewarded early on, helping you achieve strong grades, meet demanding deadlines, and build a successful career or excel in graduate school. Over time, the cost of maintaining this level of functioning begins to build. What once felt like a choice starts to feel like a requirement, even as your energy and capacity shift. There is less room to slow down, adjust, or respond to your own needs without guilt, while the pressure to maintain the same level of performance remains constant. As a result, stress accumulates and compounds, often in ways that are easy to overlook, leading to burnout that develops quietly in the background.
When burnout is not addressed early, it can develop into chronic burnout, impacting your mental health, motivation, and overall quality of life. Many high-achieving women begin to notice a decline in self-esteem, increased exhaustion, and a loss of motivation to keep up with work, school, or daily responsibilities. Over time, burnout can also affect your personal life, making it harder to enjoy activities you once found fulfilling, such as hobbies, reading, or spending time with loved ones. Without support, chronic burnout can continue to affect your emotional well-being, productivity, and relationships, which is why burnout recovery is so important.
Women of all races, ethnicities, & cultural backgrounds
Clients of all citizenship, visa, & residency statuses
Expatriates / adult third-culture kids
LGBTQIA+
Women in leadership (executives, directors, etc)
Entrepreneurs & business owners
Professionals in high-demand fields
Graduate students
Ambitious & driven women
Anxiety and chronic stress
Burnout recovery
Perfectionism
Self-criticism / shame
Imposter syndrome
Identity development & life transitions
Trauma (generational, career, sexual, religious, etc)
Burnout recovery therapy at Mind Stretch Psychology is evidence based, trauma informed, and tailored to your specific needs. It is designed to help you create meaningful, lasting changes in how you function day to day, not just temporary relief from stress.While each session is personalized to your experience, there are common ways burnout recovery therapy often unfolds:
A clear starting point
We begin by understanding how burnout is showing up in your life, including your energy, workload, thought patterns, and current stress levels
Identifying the patterns driving burnout
You will gain insight into the internal and external factors that keep burnout going, such as perfectionism, over-responsibility, and difficulty slowing down
Learning to recognize your limits in real time
We focus on helping you notice early signs of stress and depletion so you can respond before reaching burnout again
Building practical skills to manage stress and pressure
This includes strategies to regulate your nervous system, reduce mental overload, and improve focus and clarity
Setting boundaries that actually hold
You will learn how to communicate and maintain limits in a way that feels clear, confident, and sustainable
Shifting how you relate to achievement and expectations
Therapy helps you move away from pressure-driven performance toward a more flexible and sustainable way of succeeding
Creating a plan for long-term burnout prevention
The goal is not just recovery, but helping you maintain your progress so burnout does not keep returning
Restore your energy so you can show up consistently without feeling depleted
Think more clearly and make decisions without constant overthinking
Stay productive without relying on pressure, urgency, or burnout cycles
Set boundaries confidently without guilt or second-guessing
Reduce stress, anxiety, and emotional exhaustion
Rebuild motivation for both work and your personal life
Develop a more supportive, less critical relationship with yourself
Create a sustainable way to succeed without burning out again
Burnout can make even small decisions feel overwhelming, especially when you are already stretched thin. Reaching out for support may feel like one more thing on your list, but it can also be the turning point toward feeling more steady, clear, and like yourself again. You do not have to figure this out on your own.
At Mind Stretch Psychology, we offer consultations to help you talk through what you are experiencing, ask questions, and determine whether burnout recovery therapy feels like the right fit for you. This is a space to slow down, be heard, and begin moving toward a more sustainable way of living and working.
Getting started is simple:
1. Schedule a consultation to explore whether burnout recovery therapy is right for you
2. Begin working together to understand and shift the patterns contributing to burnout
3. Build a more sustainable way of showing up in your work and your life
At Mind Stretch Psychology, we work with high-achieving women navigating concerns that often exist alongside burnout, including anxiety, perfectionism, imposter syndrome, trauma, identity development, and major life transitions. While many clients initially seek support for burnout, it often becomes clear how interconnected these experiences are. Our approach is designed to address these patterns together, supporting you in a way that reflects the full complexity of your life rather than focusing on just one piece.
You do not have to wait until burnout becomes overwhelming to seek support. Addressing it early can make a meaningful difference in how quickly and fully you recover.
If you are ready to improve your mental health, restore your energy, and feel more like yourself again, burnout recovery therapy can help.
Reach out to schedule a consultation and take the first step toward burnout recovery.

Collaborative and transparent relationship where you can feel safe and empowered to express all parts of yourself and feel supported, validated, and challenged to expand your capabilities. It is grounded in informed consent, ethical care, and mutual respect.

Sessions balance depth with practicality. At times we may slow things down to understand long-standing patterns, emotional responses, or relational dynamics. At other times, we focus on concrete strategies and shifts that support change in the present. The pace is guided by your goals, readiness, and capacity.

Change is guided by your readiness, motivation, and willingness to engage in the process. I support this growth through reflective listening, insight, and practical strategies, while encouraging both in-session exploration and between-session activites to help you move toward your goals.

My approach to therapy is grounded in a multicultural, trauma-informed framework that honors the full context of your experiences. Every woman brings a unique set of cultural influences, personal values, and lived experiences that shape how she understands herself and moves through the world. I approach therapy with respect for this individuality, while also recognizing that emotional wellbeing is shaped not only by personal history, but by relational, cultural, and institutional environments. Safety, trust, and collaboration guide our work, allowing therapy to unfold at a pace that honors your readiness to process difficult experiences while building resilience and moving toward lasting change.

The interventions I use are intentionally selected to align with your needs, readiness for change, and therapeutic goals. My work integrates action-oriented, research-supported approaches, including third-wave cognitive behavioral therapies such as Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) and Compassion-Focused Therapy (CFT). I also pull from relational models such as Internal Family Systems (IFS). This integrative approach allows therapy to be both insight-driven and practical to support you in fostering emotional flexibility and resilience
As a licensed psychologist with a PhD in Counseling Psychology, I bring extensive experience supporting high-achieving individuals in settings such as university counseling centers and private practice. I work with clients across diverse cultural backgrounds, identities, and life experiences, many of whom are navigating complex environments, multiple roles, and the internal pressures that often accompany high levels of responsibility.
Recognizing the prevalence of trauma among high-achieving women, I am certified in Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART), an evidence-based treatment that helps process difficult experiences through mindfulness-based regulation, visualization, and targeted exposure. In addition to individual therapy, I have facilitated therapy groups centered on concerns such as anxiety and perfectionism, relationship and sexual health, women of color, and LGBTQIA+ communities.
Before becoming a psychologist, I earned my master’s degree from the London School of Economics in international development and humanitarian emergencies and worked in global and organizational environments, including the United Nations, Deloitte, and nonprofit organizations. These experiences continue to shape how I understand ambition, leadership, performance-driven cultures, and the emotional realities that often accompany them. Having managed teams, led research initiatives, and developed organizational systems, I bring both empathy and real-world perspective to the therapeutic process, particularly when working with women who are accustomed to operating at a high level.
I also bring personal experience navigating multiple cultural worlds. As a cisgender, multiracial woman who grew up as an expatriate and third-culture kid, I was immersed from an early age in diverse communities and surrounded by globally minded individuals. These experiences deepened my sensitivity to identity, belonging, adaptation, and the often unspoken complexity of living between cultures or expectations. My work is guided by ongoing cultural humility and responsiveness, grounded in the understanding that the contexts shaping a woman’s life are layered and continually evolving.
Outside of work, I spend my time with people I love, often talking for hours, attending cultural and community events, or traveling around the world. I also value alone time to recharge, whether through documentaries, nostalgic TV shows, or getting lost in a good book.

+1 (385) 560-5871
[email protected]
Note: This practice is not an emergency service. If you are experiencing a mental health emergency, please call 911, contact the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, or go to your nearest emergency room.
© 2026 Mind Stretch Psychology. All rights reserved.

+1 (385) 560-5871
[email protected]
Note: This practice is not an emergency service. If you are experiencing a mental health emergency, please call 911, contact the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, or go to your nearest emergency room.
© 2026 Mind Stretch Psychology. All rights reserved.