In person in Herndon, VA & Online across Virginia

Clinical Supervision

Grounded, relational supervision for residents in counseling finding their own way into this work — with sexuality, attachment, and the body held as central, not separate.

You deserve guidance and support in finding your own way of being a therapist — the kind that includes real feedback, real challenge, and real celebration along the way.

I believe…

I’m Meghan.

My approach

I'm an AASECT-Certified Sex Therapist and Emotionally Focused Therapy specialist with over ten years of experience across outpatient and private practice settings. I didn't set out to specialize in sexuality and attachment. It became clear over time: attachment is what lets you work with a client's full emotional depth — and sexuality was already part of that depth, all along.

That's become my specialty. It's not what supervision with me has to be about. Whatever you're bringing — anxiety, couples work, a caseload that has nothing to do with sex therapy — that's welcome here.

My supervision model focuses on:

  • Attachment — Reading the patterns clients bring into the room, and the ones that show up between us.

  • Sexuality — Building the comfort and language to sit with sexuality as clinical material, whenever it's relevant.

  • Self — Understanding how your own story shows up in your work, and learning to trust it.

Things we’ll work on

Attachment

Understanding how a client's earliest experiences of closeness shape the patterns they bring into the room. Learning to notice those same patterns as they show up between the two of us, live.

Self

Understanding your own story, identity, and voice as a therapist, and how they show up in your work. Learning to trust that voice, rather than treating it as something to manage or hide.

Ethics

Feeling grounded and prepared to navigate the dilemmas that rarely have one clear right answer. Knowing where to go, and what to ask, when the path forward isn't obvious.

Practice

Cutting through the mixed messages around documentation and the non-clinical side of this work, so you feel clear on what's required. Exploring what building your own practice could look like, someday.

Sexuality

Building the comfort and language to sit with sexuality as clinical material, without flinching or changing the subject. This becomes part of the work whenever it's relevant to what a client brings.

Holistic

Looking at the whole person in front of you, not just the presenting problem or the diagnosis. Learning to notice the body and draw on somatic practices, since change isn't only cognitive.

Frequently asked questions

Get in touch

Let’s start the conversation.

Currently accepting new supervisees — reach out and let's talk about fit.

Please reach out using this form. I will respond within 2 business days.