CLINICAL SUPERVISION

We’ll attend to the full complexity of your work: looking at what’s arising - whether that’s a dynamic with a client, a sense of disconnection, a stuck place or a moment of transformation. Sessions offer containment, support and shared inquiry. I aim to meet you where you are, with honesty and care.

I offer integrative supervision for therapists, trainees, and holistic health practitioners to explore your client work, professional development, and the relational, emotional, and energetic dynamics that arise.

Sessions can be one-to-one or in small groups (up to four people).

  • Individual therapists

  • Therapists in groups of 2 - 4

  • Holistic health practitioners working across modalities

Individual therapists

Supervision is a confidential, collaborative process that supports reflection, insight and ongoing development. It offers a place to think through your work, explore challenges, and stay connected to what matters. Whether you're just starting out, building a private practice, or bringing long experience to your work, supervision helps build confidence, strengthen ethical awareness, and shape your own approach. It invites curiosity about both the practical and less visible aspects of practice—intuition, relationship, and the patterns that quietly influence how we work. Grounded and spacious, supervision supports sustainable practice, openness to learning, and the self-awareness needed to meet others with care and integrity.

Group Supervision

Group supervision offers an enriching way to share knowledge, reflection and community. Each practitioner brings their own experience, style and dilemmas, creating a field of diverse insight. Over time, the group can become a supportive and reliable space for shared learning, connection, and accountability.

Part of my own experience includes working as a group supervisor for Mind, supporting therapists at the Asian Voluntary Counselling Service. This work involves complex needs, intersecting identities, and systemic challenges—deepening my understanding of holding space for both the individual and the wider field in which we all operate.

Holistic health practitioners

Supervision supports those working with the body, energy, or health-based consultation in a reflective and ethical way. For practitioners using touch, it can be a place to explore the somatic and relational nuances of hands-on work - boundaries, energetic attunement, or emotional transference. For those whose work is more dialogue-based, it offers a space to consider intention, responsibility, and the impact of your presence.

Whatever your modality, supervision helps deepen awareness of what you’re offering and how you’re being affected. It supports you to stay grounded, ethical, and clear in your work, especially in practices where you may work solo or without regular peer contact.

GET IN TOUCH TO ENQUIRE ABOUT CLINICAL SUPERVISION

FAQs

  • Yes, I offer concessions for all trainees, newly qualified therapists (within 2 years of qualifying), and therapists offering low-cost sessions. Please let me know if this applies to you when you get in touch.

  • The initial consultation is £45, and ongoing sessions are £70 per hour. Low-cost places are available for all trainees and newly qualified therapists, for both group and individual sessions.

  • I have experience working with complex needs, intersecting identities, cultures, and systemic challenges. I offer a supportive space to explore these issues and develop strategies for working effectively with your clients.

  • The length of session (usually 60 or 90 minutes), and frequency depends on your case load, how much support you would like, and where applicable, the requirements of your regulatory body. We can discuss this in the free intro call or consultation.

  • Cancelled sessions are charged for in full with less than 48 hours notice, and if is not possible to re-arrange.

“Trust children: nothing could be simpler, or more difficult. Difficult because to trust children, we must trust ourselves, and most of us were taught as children that we could not be trusted””

— Wilmot