Where insight meets integration: intensives built to hold, not just reveal.
I've spent twenty years building a therapy practice from nothing into something real — eighteen clinicians, thousands of sessions, more honest conversations than I can count. Somewhere along the way I got curious about what happens when insight moves faster than talk therapy usually allows. That curiosity became ketamine-assisted therapy work, and eventually a method I built specifically for people who don't have years to spend circling the same pattern. My clients are usually high-functioning, self-aware, and tired of insight that doesn't change anything. They know what's wrong. They want it to actually shift. I run intensives and retreat-based work in Santa Fe — a place that, not coincidentally, has always been good at helping people see themselves clearly. The desert doesn't let you hide the way a weekly fifty-minute session can. This isn't about a breakthrough moment for its own sake. It's about building something that holds after you leave the room.