
Therapy for family dysfunction, healthcare workers, and couples.
Individual, Physician, and Couples therapy in Maryland, DC, Pennsylvania, and Texas
Exciting news in 2025!
Sarah is now accepting clients in Washington DC & Maryland
Welcome to your home for compassionate, evidence-based therapy.
Break old patterns, heal from the past, and move forward with better, healthier, relationships with yourself and others.
I work with a wide range of clients, but have a few specialties. I work with family peace-makers and people-pleasers looking to shift and cope with dysfunctional family relationships. I work with women leaving abusive and toxic relationships, and I work with a wide range of healthcare professionals. I also help couples reconnect when they feel angry and distant from each other.
I believe fiercely in the power of therapy to help individuals and families see how unhealthy patterns and beliefs impact their lives, and utilize compassionate care and evidence-based tools to create sustainable change.
If you are a resident of Pennsylvania, Texas, Maryland, or DC seeking therapy, I may be the right fit for you.
Let’s undo the patterns keeping you stuck.
Together, my clients and I identify the roots of anxiety, address family dysfunction, heal past trauma, and create a new roadmap for the future.
Individual Therapy
I help burned-out peacemakers, chronic people-pleasers, those with a history of trauma, and high anxeity individuals move forward in new ways.
Physician Therapy
I help physicians and other healthcare workers cope with the demands of their job, address burnout, and address specific challenges of working in US healthcare.
Couples Therapy
I help couples work through communication issues, ongoing conflict, past betrayals, and extended family struggles.

The Latest of Sarah’s Writing on Psychology Today
Where is Sarah?
Sarah conducts virtual therapy with clients from Maryland, Washington DC, Pennsylvania, and Texas.
Sarah lives in Chevy Chase, Maryland and sees in-person clients in Silver Spring, Maryland.
The discourse around family relationships has become all or nothing. Either we need to accept family members exactly as they are, or we have to cut them off entirely. Either they need to be met with gratitude, or they need to be held accountable.