Depression Therapist in New York & California
Depression can quietly pull you away from yourself—altering how you think, feel, and move through the world. For many, it is difficult to put into words, even from the inside. What may be visible on the outside rarely captures the weight, numbness, or exhaustion experienced internally. If you are exploring this page, you may be sensing that something has shifted, or that familiar ways of coping are no longer working. The information below is intended to offer clarity and support as you consider whether depression therapy in New York or California feels like a helpful next step toward relief and healing.

What Is Depression?
Depression is a complex and deeply personal experience that can affect how you think, feel, and engage with daily life. It often extends beyond sadness alone, shaping emotional, physical, cognitive, and relational well-being in ways that can feel difficult to articulate—even to yourself. Many people describe depression as a sense of heaviness, numbness, or disconnection, rather than a single identifiable emotion.
At times, it can become challenging to distinguish between natural responses to life—such as grief, loss, loneliness, or disappointment—and depressive patterns that feel more pervasive or unrelenting. What may begin subtly can deepen over time, creating a sense of moving through life on autopilot or feeling distant from parts of yourself that once felt familiar. Everyday tasks—work, relationships, personal care, or decision-making—may begin to require an inordinate amount of effort.
Depression can show up differently from one person to the next. For some, it presents as persistent sadness or emotional pain; for others, as emotional numbness, fatigue, low motivation, or a loss of interest or pleasure in things that once mattered. It may include negative thinking patterns, self-criticism, irritability, difficulty concentrating, sleep disruption, or a gradual withdrawal from social connection. Depression frequently co-occurs with anxiety, creating an internal experience that feels both heavy and restless at the same time.
One of depression’s most challenging qualities is how fully it can blur the line between the condition and the self. It can begin to feel as though this state is who you are, rather than something you are experiencing. Therapy helps restore that distinction—supporting you in understanding depression as a meaningful response to internal and external circumstances, rather than a fixed identity or permanent reality.
From a holistic, somatic, and psychodynamic perspective, depression is approached with curiosity rather than judgment. It is understood as having context—often shaped by emotional history, relational experiences, nervous system responses, and unprocessed loss or stress. Through therapy, we work to gently explore these layers, reduce the weight of depressive patterns, and create space for reconnection, movement, and a renewed sense of self.
Depression Therapy Support
Support for persistent sadness, emotional numbness, low motivation, fatigue, burnout, loss of interest or pleasure, negative thinking patterns, and depression that co-occurs with anxiety. Depression therapy can help identify the emotional, relational, and nervous system dynamics that contribute to depressive patterns—while supporting reconnection, internal movement, and a greater sense of engagement with life.
Special Focus Areas
While depression is always personal, certain patterns commonly emerge. Therapy may be helpful if you experience:
Your Depression Therapy Experience
Depression therapy is a focused, collaborative process shaped around your internal experience. Sessions are guided by how depression shows up emotionally, physically, and relationally, and by what feels most supportive at each stage of the work. Together, we slow things down to better understand the patterns sustaining depression and create space for movement and change.
Our work often explores the emotional, relational, and somatic dimensions of depression—helping it feel less heavy and more workable over time. The aim is not to eliminate depression entirely, but to reduce its hold so you can engage with your life with greater presence, clarity, and self-connection.
- Sessions are 45 minutes, typically held once weekly.
- Some individuals engage in shorter-term work, often three to six months, when focusing on a specific depressive episode or life transition.
- Others choose longer-term therapy to explore deeper emotional patterns and nervous system responses, continuing for as long as the work remains meaningful.
- The pace and duration of therapy are always guided by your needs.
How Care Is Shaped
Effective depression therapy depends on a sense of emotional safety and attunement. In my private practice, care is tailored to the individual rather than driven by a standardized protocol. Attention is given to both depressive symptoms and the underlying emotional and relational contexts in which they developed. Our work together is shaped by:
- Your specific depressive patterns and internal experience
- How depression is held somatically and physiologically
- Your emotional history and relational dynamics
- Your temperament, communication style, and pacing needs
- A thoughtful integration of somatic awareness and psychodynamic exploration
The therapeutic relationship itself is central. Creating a space where you feel sufficiently supported to explore, reflect, and gently shift long-standing patterns is an essential part of the process.
Support Between Sessions
Therapy is the primary space for working with depression, though some people benefit from gentle, supportive practices between sessions. These are not intended to manage or override depression, but to offer moments of grounding and support within daily life. Supportive practices may include:
- Mindfulness or body-based practices focused on present-moment awareness
- Gentle movement, such as yoga, approached without performance pressure
- Time in nature to support nervous system settling
- Slow, conscious breathing with an emphasis on extended exhalation
- Nourishing movement, rest, and nutrition approached with consistency rather than rigidity
These practices are optional and explored with care. The intention is not to add more to your plate, but to support a sense of internal steadiness, reconnection, and ease.

