Whether you're coming in solo, as a pair, a triad, or a whole polycule — there's a service designed for the shape of your life, not the other way around.
Trauma-informed, evidence-based therapy tailored entirely to you — 50-minute sessions, weekly or biweekly.
Relationship counseling is available for all relationship structures — traditional dyads, ethically non-monogamous partnerships, triads, and polycules. All relational identities are welcome, and none require an explanation.
Communication, conflict resolution, trust and intimacy rebuilding, and relationship transitions for two-partner relationships.
Support built for the actual shape of your relationship — not a monogamy framework with the edges filed off.
Structured space for three or more partners (up to four), with rates adjusted to confirmed attendance. Larger configurations are welcome to discuss subgroup formats at intake.
A structured, facilitated conversation for communication and repair — available not just to romantic partners, but to friends, siblings, co-parents, business partners, and chosen family. Sessions run for dyads, triads, or groups of up to four, with the same attendance-based rate adjustment as relationship counseling.
Anyone with a relationship worth repairing but a conversation too charged to have alone — co-parents navigating a transition, siblings working through old wounds, business partners hitting a wall, or a polycule needing a neutral third party in the room.
Relationship Contract Facilitation is a structured consultation service designed to help partners articulate values, agreements, and relational boundaries. It does not constitute legal advice, and the documents produced are not legally binding contracts.
A guided process to help partners explore values, agreements, and boundaries within their chosen relationship structure — including ENM agreements, BDSM dynamic contracts, and polycule charters.
Available as a single session, a full three-session package with a written summary, or an extended five-session package for complex or multi-partner structures.
Process groups and psychoeducational workshops, forming now.
You shouldn't have to teach your therapist your own vocabulary. Here's the language you'll hear in this practice — and what it means when I use it.
An umbrella term for relationship structures where all partners consent to, and are aware of, each other's additional romantic or sexual relationships. "Ethical" points to the consent and communication holding the structure together — not to a judgment about monogamy.
Often used interchangeably with ENM. Both describe relationships built with full knowledge and agreement of everyone involved, in contrast to infidelity, which is built on secrecy.
A specific form of ENM centered on the capacity to hold multiple loving, committed relationships at once — as opposed to non-monogamy structures that are primarily sexual rather than romantic.
The network of people connected through polyamorous relationships — partners, metamours (your partner's partner), and the web of connections between them. No two polycules look alike, and this practice doesn't expect yours to match anyone else's.
Care from a clinician who understands consensual kink and BDSM dynamics as a legitimate expression of intimacy and identity — not a symptom to treat. You won't be asked to justify your dynamic, and it won't be pathologized by default.
A polyamorous orientation where an individual maintains their own autonomy as the primary structure of their life, rather than building around a nesting or hierarchical partnership.
Your partner's partner — a relationship with its own dynamics, sometimes close, sometimes distant, that's part of many ENM and polyamorous structures.
A 15-minute consultation is always free — we'll figure it out together.