My Approach to Helping
You’ve probably had to hold it together for a long time.
For your family. For your community. For yourself. You might be grieving something recent, something old, or something you never got to name. Maybe you’re queer, neurodivergent, first-generation or all three and it feels like no one ever taught you how to rest, how to feel, or how to not carry everything alone.
I’m Andrielle, and I became a therapist because I lived in that kind of silence for years. When I lost my dad at 14, no one really asked how I was doing. Everyone was hurting, but no one made room for my grief. I know what it’s like to be invisible in your pain, to feel like your sadness is too complicated, your identity too layered, your life too full of contradictions to explain.
That’s why I create therapy spaces that are honest, grounded, and unapologetically real.
We don’t have to pretend in here. I work with queer folks, neurodivergent clients, and people from immigrant or culturally complex backgrounds who are tired of being resilient all the time. Whether you’re navigating grief, burnout, shame, or just trying to feel like yourself again, I offer therapy that centers emotional truth, not performance.
My approach blends grief-informed care, relational trauma therapy, and identity-affirming work rooted in community and lived experience. We’ll slow down, name what hasn’t been named, and build tools that actually feel like they fit you, not ones that erase you.
If you’ve felt overlooked, overwhelmed, or exhausted from trying to make yourself smaller just to survive, let’s work on expanding your capacity instead. You deserve space to be seen, to feel, to rest, and to heal.