“We are powerful because we have survived.” - Audre Lorde

I am so glad you’re here! My name is Danielle. I am a white, cisgender, pansexual woman. I am a Licensed Clinical Social Worker in the states of New York and Pennsylvania. I have worked in many areas of social work over the years, including foster care and adoption, child welfare, substance abuse, and perinatal mental health, before becoming a clinician. I can’t wait to work with you!

Clients come to me when they want to make big changes in their lives, but they might have been unsuccessful in therapy in the past. I am ready to help you do the work.

My Approach to Therapy

I believe that therapy is a collaboration, not a hierarchy. If something isn’t working for the client, I want them to feel comfortable speaking up about it. I practice from an anti-racist, anti-oppressive, anti-capitalist, anti-diet, social justice framework. We will talk about how mental health and trauma is a systemic issue, not an individual issue.

My approach is humorous when appropriate, but also compassionate and kind. I will gently challenge you to challenge unhealthy thought patterns and replace them with more constructive ones. In couples therapy, I will interrupt negative communication patterns to help you and your partner(s) improve and learn skills you can practice at home.

How is therapy with me different?

I practice from an anti-capitalist, anti-racist, anti-diet, social justice framework. I am fully ready to talk about the systemic issues contributing to your mental health, not just the individual factors going on in your life.

Am I the right therapist for you?

  • The clients that have the most success with me are those who are ready to dive into the “whys” of their behavior and reactions. I enjoy working with LGBTQ+ individuals, couples, and polycules and I provide compassionate, gender-affirming care to trans- and gender non-conforming individuals. I enjoy working with people with all kinds of trauma, especially childhood or complex trauma. I also work well with pregnant and postpartum individuals and their partners.

  • You may not enjoy working with me if you want to “vent” about problems of the week without digging deeper into the past. I am professional to a point, but I am also down-to-earth and have been known to let loose a swear word now and again.

  • When I am not working, I enjoy spending time with my husband and our two cats, Frankie and Ruby. I play in a queer kickball league in Buffalo in the summer, and I also enjoy hiking and relaxing outside. I am a creative person and enjoy quilting, crocheting, and using my Cricut to make crafts for my family and friends. I also play several instruments and you may see me out and about playing saxophone in the community!

Specialties

  • Trauma

    I use EMDR and schema therapy to help you get to the root of your trauma and heal the symptoms associated with it.

  • Couples

    I use the Gottman Method, schema therapy, and Relational Life Therapy to help you and your partner(s) improve communication, intimacy, and conflict management.

  • Intensives

    For when you want to feel better, faster, intensive sessions allow more time for processing.

Clinical Experience

  • Master of Social Work – University at Buffalo, 2018

    B.S. Integrative Neuroscience – Binghamton University, 2015

    B.A. Music – Binghamton University, 2015

  • Certification in Individual Schema Therapy – International Society of Schema Therapy, 2024

    Certification in Perinatal Mental Health – Postpartum Support International, 2021

    Microcredential in Early Childhood Mental Health – Niagara University, 2021

  • EMDR Training – 2022

    Individual Schema Therapy Training – 2022

    Perinatal Mental Health Training - 2021

  • Member, Western New York Trauma Collective

    Member, Western New York Postpartum Connection

    Member, International Society of Schema Therapy

    Member, Postpartum Support International

“I believe that telling our stories, first to ourselves and then to one another and the world, is a revolutionary act. It is an act that can be met with hostility, exclusion and violence. It can also lead to love, understanding, transcendence and community.” — Janet Mock