Psychotherapy for Students of

A Course in Miracles

Honoring your spiritual path while transforming anxiety, depression, trauma, and relationship struggles

As a student of A Course in Miracles, you may have found it difficult to find a therapist who appreciates the Course and its approach to healing the mind. Therapists unfamiliar with it may not understand its psychology of separation, guilt, and projection, and may approach your concerns in a way that does not reflect the inner logic of the Course.

As a student of ACIM myself, I take your spiritual path seriously. I do not interpret it away, nor do I use spirituality to bypass emotional pain. My work focuses on bringing what is unconscious into awareness, where it can be transformed—supporting you in staying honest about what is actually happening inside you while remaining true to your path.

When immersing oneself in the course, one often becomes even more aware of guilt, fear, anger and judgments of self or others. You see issues in close relationships, where conflict, distancing, or repeated misunderstandings arise. Together, we will find the sources of these habitual ways of being so that they can be uprooted and genuine change can occur.

My spiritual background includes sustained practice within several contemplative traditions, including five years in a meditation community, later study and practice of Buddhism, and most recently, The Way of Mastery. These experiences inform my understanding of non-dual spiritual work while remaining grounded in psychological practice.

“Healing is limited by the limitations of the psychotherapist, as it is limited by those of the patient.
The aim of the process, therefore, is to transcend these limits.
Neither can do this alone, but when they join, the potentiality for transcending all limitations has been given them.”

A Course in Miracles, Psychotherapy Supplement (P-2.III.2:1–3)