Many of the people I work with are carrying something they haven't quite been able to name yet. It might look like perfectionism, or all-or-nothing thinking, or a quiet pressure that's been building for longer than they can remember. Often it shows up in the gap between how capable they appear to others and how lost they feel inside. I work with adolescents, young adults, and athletes navigating anxiety, identity, relationships, and the weight of cultural and family expectations, helping them slow down enough to explore what's actually going on beneath the surface.
My background started in Kinesiology, where I worked on a student mental health program during COVID and came to understand how deeply the mind and body are connected. That awareness shapes how I work. I bring together multiple approaches depending on what each person needs, because I don't think one method fits everyone.
In a first session, I usually ask what brought someone here, what they'd want to avoid in therapy, and simply, who they are. I want to understand how they'd like us to work together before we begin.
I came to Canada carrying my Egyptian background with me, and that experience informs how I hold space for clients from Arab and Egyptian communities, as well as anyone navigating cultural expectations that don't leave much room for struggle. I work with cultural humility, and I try to be a familiar, safe presence for people who have never had that before.
If you've been waiting for a space that feels like it was made for you, I hope this might be it.