DBT-Informed Online Therapy in Pennsylvania & Florida
Online therapy for teens and young adults experiencing emotional intensity, anxiety, and overwhelm
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is a core part of my approach. It offers practical, skills-based support for navigating anxiety, relationship stress, emotional overwhelm, and patterns that feel difficult to change.
In my work, DBT is not just a set of techniques — it’s a way of helping you understand your emotional world with more clarity, flexibility, and self-trust.
Many of the people I work with feel deeply sensitive to the world around them and may experience emotions intensely. At times, this can show up as overwhelm, shutdown, impulsivity, self-criticism, or relational stress. DBT offers a way to slow down, notice what is happening, and learn new ways of responding with greater awareness and steadiness.
Who I Work With
I use a DBT-informed approach in my work with teens and young adults who are navigating emotional intensity, anxiety, depression, identity or gender-related distress, and challenges in relationships or self-esteem.
Many clients also experience patterns related to Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) or BPD traits, including intense emotions, fear of abandonment, difficulty maintaining a stable sense of self, and feeling “too much” or “not enough” at the same time.
Some clients come in with a diagnosis. Others simply recognize patterns that feel painful, confusing, or hard to manage. There is no “right way” to arrive here.
My DBT-informed approach is both structured and flexible. Some sessions may focus more on practical skills and emotion regulation, while others create space for reflection, self-understanding, and exploring deeper emotional patterns.
Areas we might focus on:
Noticing and naming emotions without judgment
Building tools for distress tolerance and emotional regulation
Understanding relationship patterns
Strengthening self-trust and reducing self-criticism
Creating more stability and steadiness in daily life
I often integrate mindfulness, reflection, and simple, real-life examples to make these skills feel more approachable and easier to apply outside of sessions.
What Sessions Look Like
My Approach
While DBT is structured and skills-based, I also take a psychologically grounded, whole-person approach because I believe we are more than symptoms, labels, or diagnoses.
Therapy can offer space to explore the full complexity of who you are — including your emotional and physical experience, your relationships, your history, and the broader context of your life. In our work together, we won’t only focus on which skills to use, but also on what your emotions might be communicating, where patterns come from, and how different experiences may continue to shape the way you relate to yourself and others.
This allows us to work with both what you’re feeling in the moment and the deeper patterns underneath it, while making space for all parts of yourself with curiosity and compassion.
You’re Not “Too Much”
Many people I work with have spent a long time feeling like they are “too sensitive,” “too emotional,” or like their reactions are somehow bigger than they should be.
DBT can help shift the focus from self-judgment toward understanding. The goal is not to get rid of emotions, but to relate to them differently so they feel less overwhelming and more workable.
Change Is Possible
Over time, clients often notice:
More emotional steadiness
Less reactivity in relationships
Greater self-awareness
Stronger self-trust
Increased ability to pause before reacting
A more compassionate inner voice
The goal is not perfection — it’s a more connected relationship with yourself.