My practice

Adam in his office, seated in front of his desk

Over time, therapy helps people make profound changes in their lives, enabling them to heal from painful pasts and experience themselves in the present as more vital and alive. As a therapist, I offer my patients a place to explore their inner worlds, their challenges, and their relationships to others. Together, we examine the forces, internal and external, that cut you off from a fuller awareness of your desires, feelings, and realities. It is through knowing and addressing these forces that we expand your ability to experience yourself, connect to others, and act to improve your life. 

A safe and attentive relationship between patient and therapist enables therapeutic transformation. I work to listen closely during sessions, attending to your need to speak your mind, to be heard and understood. At the same time, I remain attuned to what may feel unsayable and what is contributing to confusion and stress. This process of articulating yourself will help to integrate the diverse strands of your lived experience, offering greater clarity about the dynamics shaping your present ways of relating to the world.

Fees

The fee for therapy is something that I agree on with each patient. On my end, it is important to me that I be able to offer psychotherapy to a range of individuals while still being able to sustain myself. I ask all my patients to think about a fee for weekly or twice weekly therapy that is both possible and meaningful for them in an ongoing, often years-long process. When patients benefit from structural positions that create unearned advantages like intergenerational wealth, property ownership, and low levels of student debt, I ask that they consider these as factors in deciding what feels doable—a fee that we will decide together during the end of our first session. This allows me to meet others who are negatively impacted by structural forces in ranges that are possible for them.

About Me

Headshot of Adam in his office

I have experience helping people who are navigating life transitions, struggling with overwhelming feelings, living with anxiety and depression, and seeking deeper understandings of behaviors that are no longer working for them. I welcome people who are making sense of intersecting and marginalized identities, and I work to practice in ways that are antiracist, anti-oppressive, and non-pathologizing. I try not to  forward normative expectations of success and I am affirming of diverse sexualities, gender identifications, kink practices, and ways of being in relationship with others.

I went to graduate school at the Smith College School for Social Work, a psychotherapy oriented social work program in western Massachusetts. After I graduated, I did a two year, post-graduate clinical training fellowship at Swarthmore College’s Counseling and Psychological Services. In addition to clinical work, I have done research, taught, and published on the interplay of biomedical technologies, social media, and desire in queer life. In this scholarship, as well as my clinical practice, I think using frameworks from psychoanalysis and queer theory. I am currently in psychoanalytic training at the William Alanson White Institute.

I offer both virtual and in person sessions, with the in person sessions occurring at my office on 30th St between 5th Avenue and Broadway.

Contact me

Please use the form below to get in touch with me and I’ll work to get back to you as quickly as possible.