Holistic Jungian therapist specializing in trauma and relationships
I am a marriage and family therapist licensed in California with over 13 years of experience working in clinical practice. I am born and raised in San Francisco’s Mission District. I am Salvarodan and Nicaraguan; a native Spanish speaker and am fully bilingual. I have served clients experiencing multiple occurring conditions requiring some form of crisis stabilization service or intervention. I have counseled individuals and families dealing with an array of issues such as immigration/deportation, domestic and community violence, teen pregnancy, work – readiness, homelessness, substance abuse, and more.
As of 2012, my clinical experience has afforded me the opportunity to provide brief and long-term psychotherapy utilizing strength-based, trauma informed, and culturally congruent clinical interventions. I utilize a client’s worldview as a cognitive template to enhance health and wellness practices that fortify their resilience. I help motivate clients in their recovery to become agents of change and wellness in their respective communities.
My vast experience has given me a particular insight on how to collaborate effectively with individuals of multi-ethnic and multi-cultural backgrounds. Up to 70% of the clients I have worked with are monolingual Spanish-Speaking immigrants and 50% are African American. Ten percent speak Maya/Yucateco, and Maya/Mam, Quechua, Cantonese, Samoan, Tagalog, Mongolian, Arabic, English, and Russian. I understand the impact culturally informed, social justice, and relational approaches can have in defining health and wellness practices, as well as alleviating community violence and intergenerational trauma.
Licensed · Professional · Cancel Anytime
Jazmín Barrera is a marriage and family therapist licensed in California (CA LMFT 141145, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in California) with over 13 years of clinical practice. Born and raised in San Francisco’s Mission District, she is Salvadoran and Nicaraguan and is a native Spanish speaker who is fully bilingual in Spanish and English.
She has worked with clients presenting multiple co-occurring conditions that often require crisis stabilization services or intervention. Her clinical caseload has included individuals and families impacted by immigration and deportation, domestic and community violence, teen pregnancy, work-readiness challenges, homelessness, substance use concerns, and related issues.
Since 2012, her practice has included both brief and longer-term psychotherapy using strength-based, trauma-informed, and culturally congruent clinical interventions. She draws on each client’s worldview as a cognitive template to support health and wellness practices and to fortify resilience, and she aims to motivate clients in their recovery to become agents of change and wellness within their communities.
Her extensive experience has shaped a particular ability to collaborate effectively with people from multi-ethnic and multi-cultural backgrounds. Up to 70% of the clients she has worked with are monolingual Spanish-speaking immigrants and 50% are African American. Ten percent speak Maya/Yucateco, and Maya/Mam, Quechua, Cantonese, Samoan, Tagalog, Mongolian, Arabic, English, and Russian. She recognizes the role that culturally informed, social justice, and relational approaches can play in defining health and wellness practices and in addressing community violence and intergenerational trauma.
Many people wonder whether online therapy can truly help. For a range of common concerns – such as stress, anxiety, depression, relationship difficulties, or navigating life transitions – online therapy has been shown to be comparable in effectiveness to traditional in-person sessions.
One major benefit is flexibility. Clients can connect in the way that works best for them – via video calls, phone sessions, live chat, or in-app messaging – making it simpler to fit therapy into a busy schedule.
Therapists offering online care are licensed professionals, and clients are free to change providers if they decide a different fit would be better. For many people, the convenience and accessibility of online therapy make it an effective option for addressing common mental health and relationship concerns.
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