Frequently Asked Questions
Who we help
How we help
Therapy for Physicians
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Though this isn't an exhaustive list, the following mental health professionals can provide individual and group therapy for physicians: clinical social workers, pastoral counselors (members of the clergy who have specialized training in clinical pastoral education), marriage and family therapists, and psychologists. Most mental health professionals obtain a master's degree to provide therapy.
As clinical psychologists, we have PhD doctoral degrees in my practice. Many mental health professionals have extensive training and can provide individual therapy, family therapy, and group therapy. However, not all have direct experience as therapists for physicians.
All the therapists in our practice have extensive experience treating doctors in therapy.
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Yes, we provide counseling exclusively online. This allows us to offer mental health care to a wide range of medical professionals across the states of California, Texas, and 43 other states, including doctors in Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Westwood, West Hollywood, San Francisco, Orange County, Palo Alto, San Diego, Dallas, Austin, Houston, and more.
Many doctors enjoy online therapy for the convenience. Your jam-packed schedule doesn't allow you much extra time, so being able to quickly join virtual sessions can be clutch. All sessions take place via a HIPAA-compliant platform to ensure that your information stays confidential.
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Yes, confidentiality is incredibly serious to me. And you’re not alone in this fear. In fact, one study suggests that nearly 40% of physicians are reluctant to seek mental health care out of concern for jeopardizing their medical license. While your concerns are valid, so is your well-being.
Confidentiality is the utmost priority in my practice. As a therapist for physicians, I am not in-network with any insurance companies. This allows us to forgo giving a potentially stigmatizing diagnosis that you may fear having to disclose beyond our client-therapist relationship. Instead, we can support your mental health on your terms alone.
Confidentiality concerns can lead some physicians to seek care without using any health insurance benefits. Nonetheless, if you choose, you also have the option of pursuing out-of-network reimbursement for sessions. Whatever works for you, works for us.
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This specialized therapy is often a good fit for doctors who are outwardly high-functioning and successful, yet privately, they’re deeply struggling. This may include doctors who are experiencing burnout, anxiety, relationship difficulties, a sense of emotional depletion, or so many other possible difficulties (be it internally or externally).
Many of the physicians we work with are deeply capable in their professional roles, yet they find themselves repeatedly caught in patterns of perfectionism, self-criticism, painful family-of-origin dynamics, and so many other things that no longer serve them. And they come to therapy because they realize that these things are difficult to untangle on their own. This work is well suited for physicians who are ready to look beyond simplistic symptom management and instead explore the deeper emotional patterns shaping how they live and relate.
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Many stress-management approaches focus primarily on coping strategies, “quick fixes,” or symptom reduction as the main therapeutic goals. While these tools can be helpful to some extent, many physicians share that they eventually reach a ceiling in how effective these techniques feel—or that they miss the deeper mark altogether.
In our therapy work with physicians, we take a deeper, psychodynamic approach. Together, we explore the underlying emotional and relational patterns that shape how you work, relate, carry responsibility, and move through your life both inside and outside of medicine.
This work helps physicians understand the deeper emotional forces that drive perfectionism, over-responsibility, chronic pressure, and a sense of inner emptiness. Rather than offering tools to simply “manage symptoms,” the focus is on developing lasting insight and internal change, so that relief is not just temporary or surface-level.
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Yes, our practice operates exclusively online via a secure, encrypted, HIPAA-compliant video platform. This allows busy medical professionals in Santa Monica and Los Angeles to access depth-oriented care conveniently without the additional stress of commuting to an office for every session—something that many busy doctors find essential for making therapy sustainable.
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Yes, many physicians who come to therapy with us are experiencing burnout—not because they lack resilience or coping skills, but because of long-standing internal patterns that make rest, limits, and self-care difficult to sustain.
In our work together, we look beyond simply the symptoms of exhaustion to understand the emotional and relational dynamics that often drive the chronic overwork, perfectionism, self-pressure, and more. We also work on naming and validating the systemic factors within medicine and society writ large that contribute to their burnout.
By developing insight into these deeper patterns, therapy can help create change that feels more lasting and meaningful, rather than temporary relief. This work is especially helpful for physicians who find that burnout keeps returning, even when external circumstances improve.
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We operate as an out-of-network practice and do not bill insurance companies directly. Many physicians choose this model because it allows for greater privacy, flexibility, and depth in the work.
That said, we are also happy to help if you choose to seek out-of-network reimbursement with your insurance. We can provide monthly superbills or, in many cases, submit out-of-network claims electronically on your behalf, depending on your particular insurance plan.
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Many physicians are highly capable problem-solvers and “doers”/“fixers” who are accustomed to being the one who others rely on for help. These are wonderful strengths that often serve them well in medicine, but they don’t always translate when it comes other parts of their lives, particularly those related to emotional, relational, or personal patterns shaped over time.
Therapy offers a space where you don’t have to be the expert or have the answers. Instead, it provides room to reflect, gain perspective, and understand patterns that are difficult (if not impossible) to see clearly on your own.
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Therapy in my practice is structured at a minimum of once a week for sessions. This level of consistency is important for the depth-oriented work that we do, as it allows enough continuity to build momentum, insight, and meaningful change over time, rather than our time together becoming primarily about updates, playing catch up, or staying at the surface level due to long gaps between our meetings.
Some physicians also choose to meet more frequently, depending on their needs and goals, and this is certainly something that we can discuss together.
Therapy for Executives
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1. Reach out
Start by filling out our contact form. Let us know a little about yourself, what you’re looking for, and your availability for a free 15-minute consult call.
2. Schedule and complete a free 15-minute consult call
Once you reach out, we’ll schedule a no-pressure, 15-minute complimentary consult call. During the call, we’ll briefly discuss what’s bringing you to therapy, what you’re looking for, any initial questions you have, and whether Helm Psychology may be a good fit.
3. Complete forms and attend your first session
If it feels like a fit, we’ll schedule an initial session. Before that first appointment, you’ll complete initial paperwork electronically so your therapist has important background information about your history, current concerns, and what you hope to work on.
During the first session, we’ll go deeper into what’s been going on, begin getting to know you, discuss fit more fully, and explain our therapeutic approach in more detail.
4. Begin weekly therapy
Most physicians meet weekly, which is the minimum commitment we require. Weekly therapy gives the work enough consistency to move beyond the surface and into deeper, more lasting change over time.
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An executive therapist is a licensed mental health professional who specializes in working with executives, founders, CEOs, high-powered professionals, and senior leaders. This work takes into account the unique psychological pressures that come with leadership, high responsibility, decision-making, and visibility. Rather than focusing solely on performance or stress management, executive therapy often explores the deeper emotional and relational patterns that shape how a person leads, works, and experiences themselves over time.
In this practice, we provide a confidential, depth-oriented space for executives to navigate challenges, process stress and emotional toll, explore identity, and develop strategies to maintain both well-being and effectiveness.
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Executive coaching or career counseling focuses on professional development, leadership and communication skills, and achieving specific external outcomes such as leadership effectiveness or career advancement.
Executive therapy, by contrast, is provided by a licensed mental health professional and focuses on the internal emotional and relational patterns that shape how you lead, work, and experience yourself. Executive therapy provides space to explore deeper struggles like self-doubt, perfectionism, burnout, identity, and more. This depth-oriented work can also lead to meaningful internal changes that often impacts leadership and performance indirectly, but in more sustainable ways.
As clinical psychologists bound by strict healthcare privacy and confidentiality laws, we can also help with anxiety, depression, chronic stress, relationship difficulties, and trauma. We’ll also share if we think that other treatment modalities, such as burnout treatment centers would be beneficial for you.
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Yes. I provide executive counseling exclusively online, so you can quickly join virtual sessions from your office, home, or on the road without sacrificing depth or quality. All sessions take place via a HIPAA-compliant platform to ensure that your privacy is protected.
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While executive coaching typically focuses on strategy and specific professional goals, our therapy delves into the psychological roots of your behavior and feelings. We explore deep seated dynamics, such as perfectionism or family of origin wounds, that coaching strategies often cannot address effectively
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No, we treat the whole person rather than just the professional. While work stress is often the catalyst for seeking help, we frequently explore how these pressures impact your personal life, relationships, and sense of identity outside of your career
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Executives are often "fixers" who are excellent at solving problems for others, but this same skill set can create blind spots in their own emotional lives. Therapy provides a space where you do not have to be the expert, allowing you to uncover root causes that self reliance and logic alone cannot resolve
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Yes, treating burnout is a primary focus of our work. Rather than just offering stress management techniques, we work to identify the internal drivers of your burnout, such as a compulsion to overperform or an inability to set boundaries, to help you find sustainable relief
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Because we focus on deep, psychodynamic change rather than quick symptom relief, this is generally a long term process. We work together over time to dismantle longstanding patterns, meaning the duration is open ended and based on your unique needs rather than a set number of sessions
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We typically schedule sessions once a week to ensure consistency and momentum. Regular meetings are essential for building the trust and safety required to do deep, insight oriented work effectively
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Absolutely, as anxiety and decision fatigue are common struggles for leaders carrying significant responsibility. By understanding the underlying sources of your anxiety, we can help you move toward a place of greater internal stability and clarity in your decision making
Therapy for Entrepreneurs
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A therapist who specializes in working with entrepreneurs and business owners helps you navigate the emotional and psychological realities of leadership, including chronic stress, burnout, decision fatigue, relationship strain, and identity shifts that often come with building something of your own.
Rather than focusing only on surface-level stress management, this work explores the deeper patterns driving how you lead, relate, and push yourself. The goal is not just to “cope,” but instead to develop greater self-understanding, emotional resilience, and clarity. Over time, therapy for business owners can help you run your business and your life from a more grounded, sustainable place.
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Entrepreneurs often come to therapy feeling successful on the outside but depleted or stuck internally. Common themes include chronic stress, burnout, decision fatigue, relationship strain, loneliness at the top, perfectionism, difficulty slowing down, and many other concerns.
Many also grapple with identity questions, especially when their sense of self becomes tightly tied to their business. Therapy provides space to unpack these experiences, reconnect with values, and build a more sustainable way of working and living.
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Business coaching typically focuses on strategies, goals, and performance. Therapy goes deeper. Rather than offering external advice or simplistic frameworks, psychotherapy helps you more deeply understand the internal patterns shaping how you lead, relate, respond to pressure, and more.
Many entrepreneurs have already worked with coaches or consultants. Therapy offers something different: space to explore burnout, identity, emotional dynamics, and longstanding habits that don’t shift through tactics alone. The work is less about optimization and more about insight, resilience, and lasting change—both professionally and personally.
While executive coaching often focuses on business strategies, leadership tactics, and external goals, our therapy focuses on the internal world of the founder. We explore the unconscious drivers, emotional patterns, and personal history that influence how you lead, handle pressure, and relate to others. This depth-oriented work complements coaching by addressing the psychological roots that strategy alone cannot fix. -
Entrepreneurs are exceptionally skilled problem-solvers. It’s part of what makes you successful. But stress and burnout aren’t usually technical problems with quick fixes. They’re often tied to long-standing emotional patterns, pressure cycles, and ways of relating to yourself and others that developed over time.
If logic alone could resolve this, you likely would have figured it out already.
Therapy offers a different kind of support: a space to slow down, reflect, and understand what’s driving the exhaustion beneath the surface. Together, we look at the deeper dynamics shaping how you work, lead, and carry responsibility so that change becomes possible at a root level, rather than just temporarily.
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This is a common concern, wherein many entrepreneurs worry that addressing anxiety or burnout will dull their edge.
In practice, the opposite is usually true. Therapy helps separate healthy ambition from the pressure, fear, or overdrive that often fuels chronic stress. Rather than pushing yourself through adrenaline alone, you begin to lead from a place of greater clarity, intention, and emotional steadiness.
Most clients find they don’t lose their motivation, but instead, they gain access to a more sustainable form of it. Decision-making becomes clearer, relationships feel less reactive, and work no longer has to come at the expense of your wellbeing.
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Yes, absolutely. Confidentiality is foundational to this work. As a licensed clinical psychologist, I’m bound by strict legal and ethical standards to protect your privacy.
I practice exclusively via secure telehealth and do not participate with insurance panels. If you choose not to submit out-of-network claims, this provides an additional layer of discretion, as no mental health diagnosis or treatment information is shared with third parties.
Many entrepreneurs, executives, and business owners find this especially important. It allows space to speak openly about leadership pressures, finances, relationships, and internal struggles without worrying about professional repercussions or reputation. Therapy is one of the few places where you don’t have to perform. You can simply be your honest self.
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Session fees vary depending on the provider and session length. I’m happy to share current rates when we connect directly.
I am an out-of-network provider, which means payment is due at the time of service. Many clients choose this arrangement because it allows for greater privacy, flexibility, and depth of work without the limitations often imposed by insurance companies.
Depending on your specific plan, your insurance may reimburse a portion of the fee through out-of-network benefits. My office can typically assist with submitting claims on your behalf to make that process easier.
If you’d like, we can review how this works during your consultation so you have a clear understanding of what to expect.
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Our practice focuses on depth-oriented therapy, rather than quick symptom relief. While many clients feel some immediate benefit from having a confidential space to speak openly, the deeper work is about understanding the emotional and relational patterns that contribute to chronic stress and burnout.
This is not a short-term, surface-level approach. Over time, therapy helps you relate differently to pressure, responsibility, and yourself. This helps to create changes that extend beyond work into your relationships and overall sense of wellbeing. It’s a gradual, insight-driven process designed to support lasting growth, not temporary fixes.
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Yes. The phrase "it’s lonely at the top" is a reality for many business owners. Many founders carry a quiet sense of isolation, feeling unable to be fully open with employees, investors, or even loved ones about the pressures they hold. Leadership often comes with responsibility that has nowhere to land.
Therapy offers a confidential, judgment-free space where you can speak honestly about the emotional toll of running a business—the uncertainty, the weight of decisions, and the parts of yourself that don’t have room to show up elsewhere. For many entrepreneurs, simply having a place to be real about these experiences brings relief, perspective, and a deeper sense of connection.
We provide a strictly confidential, private space where you can process the heavy weight of decision-making and the emotional toll of leadership without fear of judgment or professional repercussions.
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Yes. We work exclusively via secure telehealth, which allows for consistency even when your schedule or location changes.
Many entrepreneurs travel frequently or have unpredictable days. Online sessions make it possible to stay connected to the work without disrupting your routine, whether you’re based in Santa Monica, elsewhere in California or Texas, or on the road somewhere else. Clients often appreciate being able to maintain continuity during busy seasons without sacrificing privacy or depth.
For high-achieving professionals, this flexibility makes therapy both realistic and sustainable alongside demanding leadership roles.
Therapy for Lawyers
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This is one of the most common concerns attorneys raise, and it's a reasonable one in a profession that can ask for disclosure around character and fitness. Here is a general overview, though it isn't legal advice, and questions about your specific bar obligations are best directed to your jurisdiction's rules or your own counsel.
Therapy is protected health information under HIPAA and applicable state law. The contents of your sessions are confidential, subject to the limited exceptions every therapy client is informed of at the outset—primarily situations involving imminent risk of harm or other narrow, legally mandated reporting circumstances. These exceptions are reviewed with you before treatment begins.
The way we practice adds a further layer of privacy. Because we are not in-network with any insurance providers and operate the practice on a self-pay basis, we are not required to share information with insurance providers for claims (unless you’re pursuing out-of-network reimbursement, which may require a diagnosis code on superbills to process claims).
We are not able to advise you on how any particular bar or licensing body treats these matters, and we won't characterize those obligations for you. What we can tell you is how we hold your confidentiality: carefully, within the protections and limits of the law, and with those limits made explicit before you begin.
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We are a self-pay, out-of-network practice, meaning that we don't bill insurance directly. That's a deliberate choice: it keeps your care private, frees the work from the constraints that insurers put on frequency and diagnosis, and lets us do depth-oriented therapy at a pace the work actually needs, rather than the pace a benefits plan will authorize.
We'll share current fees with you via email prior to scheduling the consultation call. If you'd like to use out-of-network benefits, we can provide monthly superbills and, depending on your plan, submit claims on your behalf—though many attorneys choose to keep therapy entirely outside the insurance system for privacy reasons.
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Yes, we work entirely online, which for most attorneys is the only way that therapy realistically fits into their schedules. Sessions happen over a secure, HIPAA-compliant platform, so you can meet from your office with the door closed, from home, or from wherever you are between obligations.
We see clients across California and Texas, including in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Silicon Valley, San Diego, Orange County, Santa Monica, Silicon Beach, Venice, Sacramento, Houston, Dallas, Austin, and San Antonio. If you’re anywhere in California or Texas, we can see you for therapy.
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We meet weekly at a minimum. Depth-oriented work depends on that continuity. It's what keeps sessions from becoming status updates on a hard week and lets us actually follow patterns more meaningfully over time. With long gaps between sessions, we would realistically just end up spending our time playing catch up, rather than being able to meaningfully potentiate growth and change over time.
We know weekly sounds like a lot when your calendar is already packed. But it's usually what makes therapy effective, rather than just one more thing on the schedule. Some clients choose to meet more often; we'll figure out the right rhythm together.
And with all that said, if weekly therapy is truly not workable with your schedule or other considerations, then this is why we also offer Therapy Intensives [link to Therapy Intensives page] as alternate containers for therapy.
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This is a common worry among high performers: that their ambition is load-bearing, and that examining it might dismantle the thing that makes you good at what you do. It's an understandable concern, and the answer is no. The goal isn't to sand down your edge or make you stop caring. It's to understand what's actually driving you, so you're operating from something more durable and clear, rather than fear of failure or the need to never be wrong.
Most attorneys find the opposite of what they feared: when your sense of self stops riding on every outcome, you start to think more clearly, recover from setbacks faster, and make decisions from judgment rather than dread. The sharpness tends to endure. What changes is how much it costs you to maintain it.
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It can, but maybe not in the way you'd expect. Therapy isn't career coaching, and we won't push you toward an exit or toward staying. What therapy can offer is room to understand the question underneath the question: why the thought of leaving is here now, what it would mean about you to go, what's actually intolerable versus what's familiar, and how much of the pull is toward something else versus away from this.
Some people do therapy and leave with real clarity. Others find that what needed to change was their relationship to the work, not the work itself, and they stay (though differently moving forward). We're not invested in which one you choose. We're invested in you making the decision from a clear place rather than from burnout, fear, or exhaustion.
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Yes, and it's worth saying that what gets called imposter syndrome is often more interesting than a confidence problem. For a lot of high-achieving attorneys, the feeling of being a fraud who'll eventually be found out isn't irrational self-doubt to be argued away. It's a pattern with roots in how achievement got tied to worth early on, in family expectations, or in environments where being impressive was the price of belonging, among many other possibilities.
Surface-level fixes ("just recognize your accomplishments") rarely touch it, because the feeling was never really about your achievements to begin with. Depth therapy looks at where the pattern came from and what keeps it running, which is what can tend to actually loosen its grip (as opposed to giving you one more thing to white-knuckle through).
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No, and most of the attorneys we work with would describe themselves exactly that way: functioning fine, meeting every deadline, winning, billing, holding it together. Therapy isn't only for the moment that things fall apart. It's often most useful precisely for the person who looks fine on the outside and feels increasingly hollow, numb, or far from themselves on the inside.
You don't need to be in crisis to deserve support, and you don't have to wait until you are. The gap between how well your life works and how it actually feels to live it is reason enough.
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It can, though probably not by teaching you a new time-management system. The exhaustion of the billable hour isn't only about volume; it's about what it does to your relationship to your own time, when every six minutes has to be accounted for and rest starts to feel like something you're stealing. Over years, that can erode your ability to turn off, even when you're technically off work.
In therapy, we look at what makes it so hard to put things down mentally: the vigilance, the sense that stopping is dangerous, the identity that's gotten built around always being available. This is so that being "on" becomes something you can step out of, as opposed to the only default setting you have available.
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Possibly, and you're not alone in raising this concern. Elevated drinking and substance use are well-documented in the legal profession, often as a way to manage pressure, wind down, or quiet a mind that won't stop. In therapy, we can look honestly at the role it's playing, what it's helping you cope with, and the patterns underneath the use.
We'll also be straight with you about fit. If what's going on rises to the level of significant dependence, that often needs a specialized or higher level of care than depth-oriented psychotherapy alone provides, and we'd help you think through what that might look like, rather than pretend otherwise. For many high-functioning professionals whose use hasn't reached that point, but is heading somewhere they don't like, therapy can be exactly the place to understand what’s going on and change course.
Intensive therapy
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It depends on which format. Monthly Intensive Therapy is designed as a form of ongoing therapy in its own right for people who want continuous depth work, but for whom a weekly session isn't workable or desirable. With Monthly Intensive Therapy, longer sessions on a monthly or twice-monthly rhythm can be the primary way we work together.
Focused intensive therapy are different: they're usually a concentrated adjunct to ongoing therapy rather than a replacement. A focused intensive can be a deeper starting point as you enter therapy, a focused piece of work within an ongoing therapeutic process, or a return around something specific. That ongoing therapy can be with us or with another therapist you're already seeing.
On the consult call, we'll figure out which fits what you're looking for.
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An intensive isn't crisis care. If you're in an emergency, having thoughts of harming yourself, or in need of urgent psychiatric support, an intensive isn't the right setting. Intensives also aren't coaching, and they're not a way to fully resolve something complex in a single sitting. And if you're not sure whether an intensive fits your situation, reach out, and we can assess further, either prior to a consult call or during one if it makes sense.
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Most intensive therapy you may have come across are built around a specific protocol: EMDR, brainspotting, or another structured method delivered in a condensed format. Our intensive therapy work differently. A therapy intensive at Helm Psychology is depth-oriented and psychodynamic, which means that there's no fixed procedure or script we're moving you through, other than the broad framework of relational psychodynamic therapy work itself. We follow what's actually surfacing for you, including the way past experiences and trauma can still shape your present, but we get there through open, relational exploration rather than one specific technique. If what you're specifically looking for is protocol-based EMDR or a structured trauma method, you may be better served by a therapist who provides those kinds of modalities.
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Yes, in many cases, whether you're already working with us, have worked with us before, or are seeing another therapist entirely. If you're seeing someone else, some people come to us for a focused intensive around a specific issue while continuing their regular therapy elsewhere. When that's the case, we think it can be helpful (with your permission) to be in some communication with your current therapist, so the intensive supports the work you're already doing rather than cutting across it. Either way, it's something we can talk through on a consult call.
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Yes. If we're already working together weekly, an intensive can give us a longer block to stay with something that keeps getting cut short by the end of the usual therapy session. Some clients also use an occasional intensive as a periodic deep-dive alongside their weekly work.
If we've worked together in the past, a focused intensive can be a way to come back for a specific reason—be it a loss, a big decision, a transition, an old pattern showing up again—without necessarily restarting weekly therapy. There's an advantage to doing that work with someone who already knows your history: less time spent catching up, more spent on what actually brought you back. It's usually something we'd decide on together, depending on whether an intensive is the right tool for what's going on.
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Most intensives run somewhere between two and four hours, depending on the format and what you're working on. We take breaks when needed; a few hours is a lot of focused work, so we'll pause when it helps to stretch, get some water or snacks, or just let your head clear before going back in.
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Yes. We offer intensive therapy virtually to clients across California, Texas, and PSYPACT states. For a longer session, meeting online has some real advantages: no commute on either end of a multi-hour block, and you can be somewhere private and comfortable, in your own space. We'll also go over anything worth having set up on your end before the intensive itself.
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Intensive therapy are a premium, private-pay service, priced to reflect the extended, dedicated time they involve. We'll go over specific pricing prior to and during the consult call, once we know which format fits what you're looking for.
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Intensive therapy are a private-pay service. Because the intensive format falls outside the standard session structure that insurance is built around, it often isn't something insurance reimburses, though it can depend on your plan. If you have questions about your particular situation, we're glad to help you figure out how to look into things.
Online Therapy
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Yes. For many people, online therapy can be just as effective as in-person work, including for depth-oriented, psychodynamic therapy. Research consistently supports the effectiveness of virtual therapy, and clinically, the most important factor in meaningful change is the quality of the therapeutic relationship that we build together. That relationship can be established and sustained thoughtfully through secure, HIPAA-compliant video platforms.
Many clients also find that engaging in therapy from their own familiar, private space allows them to feel more at ease and open, which can support deeper reflection and emotional work. In fact for some, the comfort and privacy of being at home can actually deepen the work better, rather than limit it.
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Absolutely. While some people might associate online therapy with “quick fixes” or skills-based strategies, our practice is dedicated to deep, insight-oriented care regardless of the medium.
Deep psychodynamic work depends far more on the quality of attention, emotional attunement, and consistency of the therapeutic relationship than on physical proximity. Through regular, thoughtful sessions together, it is absolutely possible to develop the trust, safety, and emotional depth needed for meaningful insight and change—even (and sometimes especially) when meeting virtually.
Many people are surprised to find that working through a screen does not dilute the process. In fact, in many cases, the familiarity and privacy of one’s own environment can actually make it easier to stay present with difficult emotions, reflect more openly, and engage deeply in the work.
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Online therapy is often the ideal solution for high achievers, doctors, and executives who have demanding schedules. It eliminates commute time and allows for greater flexibility, making it easier to maintain the consistency required for meaningful therapeutic progress. It also offers an added layer of discretion for professionals who may be concerned about privacy.
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We take your privacy very seriously and use a secure, HIPAA-compliant platform designed specifically for healthcare use for all our sessions. This helps protect your confidentiality and personal information in the same way in-person therapy does.
In addition, we pay close attention to privacy on a practical level, including secure scheduling, protected records, and thoughtful guidance around creating a private, uninterrupted space for sessions on your end. We can also discuss specific privacy concerns you may have during our initial consultation. Confidentiality and discretion are taken seriously throughout every aspect of our work.
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No—because our practice is fully virtual, you do not need to be physically located in Los Angeles or Santa Monica to work with us. While we are based in the Los Angeles area, our online platform allows us to work with clients who are located anywhere in the states where we are licensed. This also allows us to provide specialized psychodynamic care to individuals who may not have access to this specific type of depth therapy in their local area. Online therapy allows clients to engage in consistent, depth-oriented work from wherever they are.
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Online therapy sessions are scheduled at a minimum of once weekly. This level of consistency is important for depth-oriented, psychodynamic work, as it allows enough continuity to build momentum, insight, and meaningful change over time. Some clients choose to meet more frequently depending on their needs and goals, and this is something we can discuss together.
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We operate as an out-of-network practice for all services, including online therapy. This allows us to prioritize your care and privacy without the restrictions often imposed by insurance companies. Many clients choose this model because it allows for greater privacy, flexibility, and depth in the work.
That said, we are also happy to help support reimbursement when possible. Our practice can provide monthly superbills or, in some cases, submit out-of-network claims electronically on your behalf, depending on your insurance plan.
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In the rare event that technical issues arise during a session, we’ll work together to address them calmly and efficiently. If we experience connection issues during a video call, we have protocols in place to switch to a backup method or phone call to ensure our time together is preserved. In most cases, this simply means reconnecting to the video platform or briefly troubleshooting the issue. These situations are uncommon, and we take steps to use reliable, secure technology so that sessions run smoothly and consistently.
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Yes, online therapy is highly effective for treating burnout, anxiety, and the stress often experienced by high-achieving professionals, particularly when these experiences are rooted in long-standing patterns of over-responsibility, perfectionism, or chronic self-pressure. Online psychodynamic therapy addresses not only the symptoms of burnout and anxiety, but also the underlying emotional dynamics that tend to fuel them over time.
Meeting online allows clients to engage in consistent, meaningful work without adding additional logistical strain to an already demanding life. For many people, this accessibility makes it easier to stay engaged in therapy while working toward deeper, more lasting change.
By removing the stress of commuting and allowing you to engage in therapy from a comfortable environment, online sessions can actually help lower the barrier to addressing these issues.
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You can begin by reaching out through the contact form on this website to request a free 15-minute phone consultation. This conversation gives us a chance to talk briefly about what’s bringing you into therapy, answer questions you may have, and assess whether working together feels like a good fit. If we decide to move forward, we’ll coordinate next steps from there.
Psychodynamic therapy
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Many structured therapy models focus on symptom reduction through tools such as homework, worksheets, or skills practice. Psychodynamic therapy takes a different approach by exploring the underlying emotional patterns and early experiences that continue to shape how you think, feel, and relate today.
Rather than targeting symptoms in isolation, the work focuses on understanding the deeper roots of distress so that change is more integrated and lasting.
This approach can be especially helpful for high performers, who often understand their symptoms logically, yet still feel stuck despite having tried structured or skills-based therapies.
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Psychodynamic therapy focuses on creating meaningful, internal change in how a person understands themselves and relates to others. Because this work addresses long-standing emotional patterns—rather than applying short-term solutions to surface-level problems—it naturally unfolds over time. This slower pace allows for deeper insight, integration, and change that tends to be more durable and lasting.
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In psychodynamic therapy, progress is often felt before it is easily named. Rather than showing up as a single measurable outcome, it often appears as a growing sense of internal freedom and flexibility. You may notice that situations which once felt emotionally charged (or emotionally numb) begin to feel more manageable and accessible, or that you respond with greater choice and agency rather than reacting habitually on autopilot.
Progress can also look like old patterns losing their grip over time. Many people notice shifts in how they relate to themselves and others, increased emotional clarity, and a reduction in the constant sense of pressure or “drivenness” that often contributes to burnout. These changes tend to feel integrated and sustainable, rather than forced or effortful.
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Psychodynamic therapy relies on consistency and continuity to be effective. Meeting weekly (or more frequently) allows enough emotional continuity to stay connected to the work from session to session, rather than repeatedly starting over and staying on the surface “playing catch up” because so much time passes between sessions.
This regular cadence helps create a stable, contained space where deeper material can be explored thoughtfully and safely over time.
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Many leadership patterns—such as how you handle authority, conflict, responsibility, or pressure—are shaped by early relational experiences. Psychodynamic therapy explores these early patterns not to dwell on the past, but to understand how they continue to influence your reactions, decision-making, and leadership style today. By bringing these dynamics into awareness, you gain greater choice and intention in how you lead, rather than operating on automatic or reactive habits.
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Yes, absolutely. In fact, many highly logical professionals find psychodynamic therapy especially useful. This approach doesn’t ask you to abandon logic or analytical thinking. Rather, it helps you understand the emotional forces that influence how you think, decide, and relate, often outside of conscious awareness. When emotional responses are better understood and integrated, decision-making tends to become clearer, reactions less automatic, and internal tension reduced. Rather than working against logic, psychodynamic therapy complements it by expanding the range of information you can use to understand yourself and your choices.
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Yes, of course. In psychodynamic therapy, your current work stress is not a distraction from deeper work; in fact, it is often the doorway into it. Rather than separating “practical concerns” from deeper exploration, this approach looks at how current stressors interact with long-standing emotional patterns.
The pressures, conflicts, and challenges you’re facing right now often relate to deeper themes around responsibility, performance, authority, self-worth, and more. By starting with what feels most immediate and real, therapy can address present-day stress while also helping you understand the deeper dynamics shaping how you experience it.
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The therapeutic relationship is central to psychodynamic therapy. Over time, the way you experience and relate to your therapist often reflects patterns that also show up in other important relationships in your life. Many people find that experiencing the unique relationship co-created in therapy, one characterized by thoughtfulness, consistency, reflectiveness, warmth, and care, can itself be deeply healing.
By paying attention to what unfolds between us, including thoughts, feelings, expectations, and reactions, we gain valuable insight into long-standing relational dynamics. Working with these patterns within a safe, attuned relationship allows for deeper understanding and meaningful change that can extend beyond the therapy room.
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Psychodynamic therapy helps create space to reconnect with parts of yourself that may have been set aside in the service of achievement, responsibility, or constant problem-solving.
Over time, many entrepreneurs begin to notice how their sense of identity has narrowed around their role, performance, or success. By exploring the emotional and relational patterns that shaped this shift, therapy supports a more integrated sense of self that extends beyond productivity or external validation. This work can help restore a feeling of meaning, agency, and aliveness that often feels lost in the midst of sustained professional pressure.
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You do not need to be in crisis to benefit from psychodynamic therapy. Many people seek therapy because something feels off, stagnant, or no longer aligned, even if things appear “fine” on the surface. Feeling stuck often reflects underlying emotional patterns, internal conflicts, or unresolved themes that have become limiting over time. Psychodynamic therapy offers a space to explore these experiences with curiosity and depth, helping create movement, clarity, and a renewed sense of direction.
This work is often a good fit for high-achievers who recognize a “ceiling” in their growth and sense that moving beyond it requires deeper exploration of their internal world.