Eating Disorder Therapy for Women in Florida and South Carolina
If you’re living with an eating disorder, it can feel like your mind is constantly occupied by food, your body, or trying to stay in control.
You might find yourself:
Thinking about what you ate (or didn’t eat) all day
Swinging between restriction, overeating, or feeling out of control
Avoiding social situations that involve food
Feeling frustrated with yourself for “not just fixing it”
Exhausted by how much space this takes up in your life
Even if part of you wants things to change, another part of you might feel stuck, unsure, or afraid to let go.
You’re not alone in this and you don’t have to figure it out on your own.
For the woman who looks like she has it together
From the outside, it might not look like you’re struggling.
You may be:
High-achieving, responsible, and dependable
Showing up for work, school, or your family
Functioning “well enough” day to day
But internally, it feels different. There’s a constant pull around food, your body, or needing to stay in control…and it’s exhausting.
You might wonder:
“Is this really bad enough to need help?”
“Why can’t I do this on my own?”
If you’ve been living in that in-between space… functioning but struggling… this work is for you!
How I Help
I specialize in individual therapy for women navigating eating disorders or disordered eating patterns, including:
Anorexia Nervosa
Bulimia
Binge eating
Orthorexia
Chronic dieting or restriction
Obsessive thoughts about food or body image
Our work is tailored to where you are—whether you’re starting to question your relationship with food or you’re ready to make deeper, lasting changes.
My Approach
In our work together, the goal isn’t just to “stop behaviors”. It’s to help you build a different relationship with yourself.
Therapy can help you:
Spend less time thinking about food and more time living your life
Feel more grounded and less controlled by urges or food rules
Understand the patterns driving your relationship with food
Develop a more compassionate and sustainable way of relating to your body
Reduce anxiety and the need to constantly be “in control.”
This isn’t about perfection, it’s about creating real, lasting change. When helpful, I collaborate with dietitians, physicians, and other providers to support you as a whole person-not just your symptoms.
I practice from a HAES-aligned, weight-inclusive, and trauma-informed lens, meaning our work is focused on healing your relationship with food and your body—not controlling or fixing it
Why My Approach is Different
In addition to my professional experience treating eating disorders, I also bring personal understanding to this work.
I know what it’s like to:
Struggle with an eating disorder
Love someone who is struggling
Navigate the fear, complexity, and uncertainty that comes with recovery as someone in it and a family member witnessing it
This allows me to support you in a way that is not only clinically informed but deeply compassionate, real, and non-judgmental.
My goal is to help you move toward a life where your eating disorder is no longer running the show.
A life where:
food takes up less space
your body feels less like the enemy
and you have more energy for the things that actually matter to you