Clinical Supervision for LMFT Candidates in Oklahoma

More than case consultation

A lot of supervision is essentially case review. You present a client, you get feedback, you leave with some direction. That has real value. But the therapists who grow the most aren't just building technical skill — they're building self-awareness.

They understand how their own history, their nervous system, their blind spots, and their relational patterns show up in the room. They've developed enough insight into themselves that they can sit with a client's pain without flinching, without over-functioning, without getting lost in it.

That's what good supervision is supposed to cultivate. And that's the kind of supervision I want to offer. My focus is on the self of the therapist — not just what you do in the room, but who you are in it.

We'll absolutely talk about your cases — conceptualization, treatment planning, navigating difficult moments. But we'll spend just as much time on the question underneath the clinical question: what's happening in you when you're with this client? What gets activated? What pulls you toward fixing? What makes you want to look away?

That's not a criticism of where you are. Every good therapist has had to sit with those questions. The ones who do the work become the clinicians their clients remember.

The goal is to get you to the point of self-supervision where you trust yourself in the room — trusting yourself in the room and also knowing when you need to consult.

How we work together

My approach to supervision is collaborative and developmental. I meet you where you are — your experience level, your caseload, your learning edges — and we build from there. I'll be honest with you when something needs to be named, but this isn't about evaluation. It's about growth.

You'll have space to bring the cases that feel confusing or heavy, the moments you weren't sure about, and the patterns you're starting to notice in yourself as a clinician. All of it is welcome here.

I offer both individual and group supervision. Individual supervision allows for more focused, personalized work on your specific clinical development. Group supervision adds the richness of learning alongside peers — hearing how other clinicians think, process, and navigate the work is its own kind of education that individual supervision can't fully replicate.

Both formats are available virtually and in person in Edmond, Oklahoma.

This might be a good fit if:

  • You're a LMFT Candidate working toward licensure in Oklahoma

  • You're drawn to trauma-informed approaches that incorporate nervous system healing

  • You work primarily with adults, teens, and families

  • You want supervision that helps you grow as a clinician, not just move through a checklist

  • You're curious about understanding yourself in the room, not just your technique

  • You want a supervisor who will be honest with you and invested in your development

My clinical background

My clinical work is with adults, using EMDR, parts work, and somatic approaches — trauma-informed therapy that works at the level of the nervous system, not just insight and conversation. My background includes both nonprofit counseling and private practice, which means I've worked across different settings, populations, and constraints.

That range informs how I supervise. I understand what it looks like to do this work when resources are limited, when caseloads are heavy, and when the system isn't always set up to support good clinical care. We'll work with the reality you're actually in.

Credentials & Logistics

License: Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist, Oklahoma — LMFT #1340

Licensed since: 2019

Board Approved Supervisor since: 2025

Format: Individual and group supervision

Location: In person in Edmond, Oklahoma — virtual throughout Oklahoma

Let's talk

If you're looking for supervision and something here resonated, I'd love to connect. Reach out and we'll have a conversation about where you are, what you're looking for, and whether this feels like a good fit.