blog tag
Clinical supervision

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Why Therapists Need Therapy: Holding Space Without Losing Ourselves
Therapists carry real emotional weight. This post explores why having your own therapy can be an ethical, sustaining part of the work, and how being held helps you keep showing up with clarity, care, and integrity.
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LGBTQ-Affirming Peer Consults for Therapists When Clients Feel Uncertain
When your clients are carrying political fear, minority stress, and anticipatory grief, you may be holding more than “case material.” Peer consultation offers steadiness, ethics, and language that protects dignity
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Sensorimotor Therapy Supervision and Peer Consultation for Therapists
A grounded, relational space for therapists exploring sensorimotor therapy and somatic practice. Case support, pacing, and embodied clinical decision-making, with consultation shaped by years of training, supervision, and real-world application.
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For LGBTQ-Affirming Therapists: What Relational Supervision Can Hold for You
Relational and experiential supervision and peer consultation for therapists who work closely with LGBTQ clients, trauma survivors, and people living under systemic pressure. A collaborative space to slow down, track what is alive, and think together about the work you love.
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Working With a Student Therapist: What Care Looks Like When Supervision Is Close
What close supervision actually looks like in our practice, and what it can mean for you when your therapist is a practicum student. The texture of supervised work, the kind of attention it carries, and what to know before booking with Laith.