Rachel Kaplan

3000 Connecticut Avenue Northwest 804 Pershing Drive
Washington, District of Columbia 20008 United States

About

Emotional suffering, whether from depression, anxiety, grief or harm andbetrayal by others, is often invisible. While you may urgently desire help, shame andfear of exposure may make it difficult to get the help you want. In over thirty years ofpsychotherapy practice, I have learned to help patients find ways to face their worst fears and feel safer. Even desired change can bring fear of losing yourself. I think honestly confronting loss and limitaion can lead to freer decisons about living your life.

The struggle inside is often about relationships, how you treat yourself or how you feel with others. In the therapy relationship I work to help you see yourself in a new light. Seeing yourself wih more compassion helps you improve relationships in area which have previously felt difficult.

I bring to you what I've learned from work with others. I also learn from your story and what can't yet be said in words. In an atmosphere of safety and compassion sharing observations and insight, when you like yourself better, you are, paradoxically, more able to change.

Features

Qualifications: Virginia Commonwealth University
Academic Suffixes: MSW, LICSW, LCSWC
Expertise: Anxiety, Depression, Emotional Disturbance, Family Conflict, Grief, Narcissistic Personality, Parenting, Other, Relationship Issues, Self Esteem, Sexual Abuse, Trauma and PTSD

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