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Now Accepting New Clients

Currently accepting
new clients — in-person
and online.

Finding a therapist who is actually available is harder than it should be. Waitlists are long, directories are outdated, and the process of reaching out only to hear there's no availability is discouraging enough to make people give up.

I'm currently accepting new individual therapy clients in Atlanta and online across Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, New York, Colorado, and Nevada.

Start the Conversation → What this looks like
The Reality

Starting therapy shouldn't
require months of waiting.

The gap between deciding you want therapy and actually sitting in a session is one of the most significant barriers to people getting help. Every week of waiting is a week the thing you came to work on continues unaddressed.

My intake process is straightforward. You reach out, you get a response, you schedule a consultation. If it feels like a good fit, you book your first session. It doesn't have to be complicated.

Current availability. New client slots are currently open for both in-person and virtual sessions.

Fast intake process. No months-long waitlist. You'll hear back promptly and can schedule a consultation quickly.

In-person and online. Atlanta for in-person. Virtual sessions available across six licensed states.

Insurance accepted. Headway panels include Aetna, BCBS, Cigna, United Healthcare, Optum, Oscar, Oxford, and UMR.

Who This Practice Works With

What new clients typically
come to work on

These are the most common reasons people reach out — though the work is never one-size-fits-all.

Anxiety

Persistent worry, social anxiety, high-functioning anxiety that looks productive from the outside.

Depression

Flatness, withdrawal, the going-through-the-motions experience that's hard to name but real.

Relationships

Patterns that keep repeating. Distance that won't close. Conflict that cycles.

Life Transitions

New chapters that are harder than expected. Endings that need processing.

Identity

Figuring out who you are and what you actually want, separate from what others have shaped.

Trauma

What happened and how it's showing up in your present life — with a pace that's yours to set.

"The hardest part is
making the first contact.
After that, it gets easier."
— Myke Cooper, LCSW
Atlanta, GA · Online Across Six States

Ready to get started?
Reach out today.

In-person in Atlanta. Online across Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, New York, Colorado, and Nevada.

Get in Touch →