life Transitions Therapy in Salisbury, NC, for the “I’m fine” person who isn’t fine

Life transitions can mess with your nervous system, your confidence, and your sense of identity—especially when you’re the one everyone else relies on. You can be doing all the right things and still feel anxious, scattered, or emotionally numb.

In therapy, we slow things down enough to hear what’s really going on. Not the version you tell everyone else. The real one. Then we work on steady steps forward—so you’re not just surviving the transition, you’re actually building a life that fits you.

Life transitions I see most often

  • “I’m not where I thought I’d be” (midlife reality check)

  • relationship shifts (ending it, rebuilding, choosing yourself)

  • career pressure / burnout / feeling stuck

  • identity changes (empty nest, caregiving, starting over)

  • decision fatigue and constant overthinking

What we’ll work on

  • calming the spiral and getting your mind quieter

  • nervous system support so you feel less on edge

  • boundaries that don’t require a 3-page explanation

  • self-trust (so decisions don’t feel like life-or-death)

  • clarity around what you want next—and what you’re done carrying

Outcomes

No promises and no pressure. But many clients start to notice:

  • more emotional steadiness (less snapping, shutting down, or panic-braining)

  • fewer spirals and faster recovery when stress hits

  • clearer boundaries and less guilt

  • more confidence and “I’ve got this” energy

  • more calm, clarity, and peace of mind

For high Functioning women/women of color

Life transitions can look different for high-functioning women, especially women of color. On the outside, you may still be showing up for work, family, relationships, and everyone else’s needs. You may be the one people depend on, the one who “keeps it together,” and the one who figures things out. But internally, this season may feel heavy, confusing, lonely, or emotionally exhausting.

For many high-achieving women of color, life transitions are not just about change; they can bring up pressure, identity shifts, old wounds, cultural expectations, racial stress, caregiving roles, and the quiet belief that you have to be strong no matter what. Whether you are navigating divorce, motherhood changes, empty nest, career shifts, grief, aging, relationship changes, or simply realizing you want more for yourself, therapy can help you slow down, make sense of what you’re feeling, and begin choosing yourself without guilt.

What Life Transitions Can Look Like in High-Functioning Women

For high-functioning women, distress does not always look like falling apart. It may look like overthinking, irritability, emotional exhaustion, trouble sleeping, feeling disconnected from yourself, being easily triggered, struggling to make decisions, feeling resentful, or carrying guilt when you finally need rest. You may keep pushing through while feeling anxious, numb, overwhelmed, or unsure of who you are becoming in this new season of life.

FAQS

Still Have Questions?

  • Yes. I offer in-person therapy in Salisbury, NC, and I also work with clients via telehealth across North Carolina and South Carolina. If you’re local, you can come in and have a consistent space to land each week. If driving across town feels like “one more thing,” telehealth can make getting support more doable.

  • Yes. Online therapy (telehealth) is available for clients located in NC and SC. It’s a solid option if your schedule is full, you’re caregiving, you’re traveling for work, or you just don’t want therapy to become another stressor. We keep it practical and steady so you can feel supported in real life, not just during the session.

  • If your life has shifted and you feel mentally or emotionally off-balance, that counts. A life transition can be a “big” change (divorce, moving, job loss) or a quieter one (midlife identity shifts, realizing you’re burned out, feeling disconnected from who you used to be). Sometimes the transition isn’t just the event, it’s what the event brings up: anxiety, grief, pressure, self-doubt, or that “I don’t know what I’m doing anymore” feeling. Therapy helps you sort through what’s changing, what’s heavy, and what you want to carry forward.

  • Because high-functioning doesn’t mean you’re okay. It usually means you’re used to pushing through… and you’ve gotten good at carrying a lot without letting it show. Big transitions can shake the routines and roles that kept you steady, and suddenly, your coping strategies don’t work the way they used to. In therapy, we work on calming the nervous system, reducing the overthinking loops, and building steadier support so you’re not just “performing okay” while quietly falling apart inside.

  • Yes, this is one of the most common reasons people reach out. During transitions, your brain is making more decisions, managing more uncertainty, and carrying more emotional weight than usual. That’s a recipe for burnout. Therapy can help you stabilize: clarify what’s urgent vs. what’s noise, set boundaries (without the guilt hangover), and build tools that help your body come down from constant stress. The goal is more steadiness and fewer “I can’t take one more thing” moments.

  • We usually work this from two angles: the mind and the nervous system. Overthinking isn’t just “being dramatic” it’s often your brain trying to create certainty when life feels uncertain. In therapy, we practice strategies to interrupt spirals, get grounded in your values, and make decisions from a steadier place (instead of fear, pressure, or people-pleasing). You’ll still think things through, you’ll just stop living in the mental debate 24/7.

  • Yes. Life transitions can hit harder when you’re carrying cultural expectations, family roles, and the pressure to be “strong” all the time. In culturally responsive therapy, you don’t have to over-explain your lived experience or translate why something is complicated. We can talk about boundaries, guilt, family dynamics, identity, and self-trust in a way that respects your background and still helps you choose what’s healthy for you.

  • Yes. A free 15-minute consult is a low-pressure way to talk through what’s going on and see if I’m the right fit. If we decide to move forward, we’ll choose a session cadence that makes sense for your life (weekly or every other week are common starting points), and we’ll keep the process clear so you know what we’re working toward.

Let’s get you moving closer to clarity

This quick consult helps us talk through what’s going on, what you’re looking for and what the next step should be.