At Yogi Counseling, We Specialize in:
Our mission is to support people navigating the complexities of the human experience. We honor the deep inner work of healing.
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Complex Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (Complex PTSD or CPTSD) often develops after living through experiences that were not just frightening, but repeated, relational, or impossible to escape. If traditional PTSD feels like carrying one 500-pound boulder from a single overwhelming event, Complex PTSD often feels like carrying 500 one-pound rocks collected over many years. Each individual experience may not have seemed significant enough on its own, but over time they become heavy, shaping the way you see yourself, relate to others, and move through the world.
Like PTSD, Complex PTSD can include intrusive memories, flashbacks, nightmares, avoidance, and feeling constantly on guard. However, it also affects three additional areas that often make healing feel more complicated.
The first is disturbance in self-organization, which simply means that trauma has shaped your sense of who you are. Many people describe feeling fragmented, disconnected from themselves, chronically ashamed, unsure of their identity, or like they are always trying to become "good enough."
The second is emotion dysregulation, which can look like feeling emotions much more intensely than others, becoming overwhelmed easily, shutting down, becoming emotionally numb, or feeling like your nervous system is constantly swinging between too much and too little.
The third is interpersonal distress, where the injuries that happened in relationships continue to show up in relationships. You may find yourself repeating painful patterns, struggling to trust others, fearing abandonment, over-functioning to keep the peace, or feeling caught in cycles of closeness and distance that leave you longing for connection while also fearing it.
Many people are surprised to learn that emotional abuse, chronic criticism, rejection, emotional neglect, and growing up without consistent safety or emotional attunement can leave wounds that are every bit as real as more visible forms of trauma. In fact, research conducted by my colleagues and I continues to show that these experiences are among the strongest contributors to Complex PTSD because they gradually shape the beliefs we carry about ourselves, other people, and whether the world is ultimately safe. None of these responses mean there is something wrong with you. They are understandable adaptations that helped you survive environments where safety, connection, and emotional needs were repeatedly disrupted. Healing is not about becoming someone different. It is about helping your nervous system discover that survival is no longer the only way to live.
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Grief and bereavement can be deeply traumatic and its severity can often go unacknowledged in mental health spaces. Grief can also overlap with PTSD as it is deeply painful and sometimes avoided, causing cyclic triggers of the loss that sustain suffering.
The DSM recently recognized Prolonged Grief Disorder as a condition where severe grief contributes to impairment in functioning. This is not to increase pathology of a normal process, but to help people get services and provide recognition for the pain that occurs in profound loss.
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Religious abuse and spiritual betrayal can leave wounds that reach far beyond questions of faith. For many people, leaving a harmful religious community or authoritarian belief system means grieving the loss of identity, belonging, purpose, and relationships all at once. Religious abuse and spiritual betrayal can shatter identity, dignity, and purpose - sometimes costing individuals their communities, sense of self, and safety. We work with individuals who are deconstructing or recovering from fundamentalist religions, spiritual cults, or authoritarian belief systems, helping them reclaim their sense of truth and agency.
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Political trauma can develop when policies, public rhetoric, or ongoing social events create chronic fear, uncertainty, or a sense that your safety, dignity, or humanity are being threatened.
For many people, particularly those from historically minoritized communities, these experiences can compound existing trauma and contribute to chronic stress, grief, anxiety, or symptoms of CPTSD. This may include members of the LGBTQ+ community, immigrants, people from the global majority, and others whose identities have been the target of discrimination or dehumanization.
In these uncertain times, political violence is on the rise as fascist and authoritarian regimes usurp power and dismantle protections for the most vulnerable. If you are feeling traumatized by the current sociopolitical climate, you are not alone.
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We are passionate about working with people from diverse spiritual, philosophical, or contemplative backgrounds who seek healing that honors their worldview, not one that pathologizes it. Historically, the field of mental health has had a narrow scope, viewing human suffering as a personal problem - a disorder to be diagnosed and eradicated. This approach can be shaming for people when the suffering continues despite treatment. At this point, many people give up on mental health services or turn to other options.
In their search, a lot of people gravitate toward various spiritual, philosophical, or personal meaning-making systems as a way to seek relief from suffering, such as yoga, meditation, or other contemplative practices. Others turn to spiritual organizations, specific practices, or psychedelics for answers. The goal of these is typically to develop joy, find peace - or experience transcendence - and a deeper sense of what it means to be human.
While people often report finding both comfort and insight from these various approaches, many also benefit from additional support as they traverse uncharted territory and confront deeper personal truths, while others find that their journey harmed more than helped and are recovering from religious or spiritual abuse.
The inner journey can be both incredibly profound and deeply destabilizing - often defying Western logic and traditional psychological models. Here, we honor your search for transcendence, joy, peace, and wholeness - and offer integrative support for navigating the liminal spaces between personal growth, existential questioning, and spiritual awakening. We also help you deconstruct harmful experiences with support and deep reverence for wherever you are on your journey. Here, there is space for the numinous.
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Many highly sensitive people have spent years believing they are simply "too emotional," "too intense," or "too empathetic," when these experiences may actually reflect underlying neurodivergence. High sensitivity can include feeling deeply affected by other people's emotions, becoming overwhelmed by loud environments or sensory input, noticing subtle details others overlook, experiencing strong emotional reactions, requiring more time to recover after social interactions, and feeling emotionally exhausted by conflict or injustice.
For some, these traits are associated with ADHD, Autism, or the combination of both (AuDHD), particularly when accompanied by lifelong differences in attention, executive functioning, sensory processing, communication, emotional regulation, or social experiences. Rather than viewing these characteristics as flaws, a neurodiversity-affirming perspective recognizes them as differences in how the nervous system processes information, relationships, and the world.
Understanding whether high sensitivity reflects personality, trauma, neurodivergence, or a combination of these factors can provide a more compassionate framework for self-understanding and guide treatment that is better aligned with your unique strengths and needs.
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As an Oregon Approved Supervisor, I offer clinical supervision for Registered LPC Associates seeking a collaborative, neuroscience-informed, and trauma-responsive approach to counseling. My supervision goes beyond learning techniques to focus on developing therapeutic presence, deepening case conceptualization, and understanding how people heal through safe, attuned relationships.
Together, we explore complex trauma, attachment, and nervous system-informed treatment planning while supporting your growth into a confident, authentic clinician whose work is grounded in both research and genuine human connection.
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Complex PTSD (C-PTSD) continues to have little representation in the mental health literature, including lack of diagnostic representation in the DSM-5. However, the ICD-11 recognizes C-PTSD as a distinct diagnosis separate from traditional PTSD. At Yogi Counseling, we understand that C-PTSD underlies many other clinical diagnoses and reflects the profound impact of chronic, relational, and developmental trauma.
We offer an integrated, phase-based approach to care grounded in the most recent guidelines from the American Psychological Association for treating complex trauma, which you can read more about here!
We also recognize that while Complex PTSD explains many experiences, it is not the whole story for everyone. In many cases, neurodivergence represents an equally important piece of understanding how a person's nervous system has developed and adapted. We offer neurodiversity-affirming counseling for highly sensitive adults with Autism, ADHD, or AuDHD, as well as those who are questioning whether neurodivergence may better explain aspects of their lived experience. Our approach emphasizes self-understanding rather than pathology, creating a supportive space to explore identity, strengths, and challenges through a compassionate, neuroscience-informed lens.
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Phase 1: Grounding and Stabilization: in this stage, we focus on preparing the nervous system for deeper therapeutic (or trauma) work. We use:
Mindfulness practices to build awareness of triggers and body responses to trauma
Somatic interventions to support embodiment, reduce dissociation, and expand distress tolerance
Coping skills rooted in ritual and somatic practices for grounding, and integration.
Phase 2: Parts Work and Early Coherence: this is where we begin to parse out various aspects of yourself to begin to build self-coherence with the following approaches.
Internal Family Systems (IFS) parts work, a gentle and empowering method to connect the wounded inner parts to facilitate integration of the self
Phase 3: Trauma Reprocessing: this is where we engage with any core trauma material (or deeply upsetting experiences from the past that continue to cause distress) using the following approaches:
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) to reprocess trauma memories. (Note*** this requires a nervous system that is sufficiently stabilized). We are careful not to rush the process. Many with C-PTSD struggle with EMDR because of lack of adequate stabilization at phase one. We make sure you are ready for the big work. If you do not tolerate EMDR, IFS parts work is also very effective and less triggering in this phase.
Phase 4: Integration: this is where we focus on meaning-making, reintegration, embodiment, and posttraumatic growth. Here, we support you in
reconnecting with your authentic self
Exploring your values and future direction
Embracing post-traumatic growth and wholeness
This phase-based approach honors the body’s wisdom, supports your unique nervous system, and respects the nonlinear nature of healing.
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At Yogi Counseling, we offer mental health services deeply rooted in - and affirming of - spiritual and contemplative practices. Our approach is non-pathologizing and grounded in a sense of curiosity that situates the client as the expert on their own internal knowing. Our goal is to support your personal journey to the most profound parts of the human experience.
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Finally, we stand firmly in our commitment to equity, dignity, and the inherent worth of every person. We recognize that trauma does not occur in a vacuum, it is shaped by systems of oppression, historical harm, and intergenerational wounds. Healing must take these realities into account. We provide care that is anti-racist, LGBTQ+ affirming, neurodiversity affirming, and accessible to people across varying identities, cultures, abilities, immigration statuses, and belief systems. In a climate of increasing hostility toward historically minoritized communities, we affirm that silence is complicity —and we choose to speak. For more on this topic, please read our social justice statement.
Ready to learn more? We invite you to explore our services, meet our providers, or read about what to expect from counseling by clicking on the navigation links at the top. We support you on your journey —wherever you are, and wherever you’re headed.

