Holistic Jungian therapist specializing in trauma and relationships
We are made of stories—stitched together by memory, experience, longing, and the quiet hope that healing is possible. My work is to listen for those stories. To hold them gently. To help you find the threads you want to keep, and the ones you’re ready to release.
As a licensed clinical social worker, I’ve sat with people navigating the raw edges of trauma, the ache of anxiety, the fog of depression, the quiet complexity of ADHD. I’ve held space for survivors of sexual assault, for those untangling themselves from religious wounds, for souls reckoning with illness, identity, and the grief of what was never given.
This isn’t a space of judgment. It’s a space of returning—to yourself, your voice, your power. Whether you’re arriving with specific pain or a sense that something inside you is stirring, you are welcome here. You are not too much. You are not too late.
This is the beginning of something real. Let’s find it together.
Licensed · Professional · Cancel Anytime
Kristyn VanderZouwen listens for the stories people carry – the memories, the longings, and the quiet hope for healing. She offers a steady presence that holds those stories gently while helping individuals discern which threads to keep and which to let go.
As a licensed clinical social worker (MI LMSW 6801116566), Kristyn has sat with people facing the raw edges of trauma, the ache of anxiety, the fog of depression, and the subtle complexities of ADHD. She has provided space for survivors of sexual assault, for those working through wounds left by religious experiences, and for people reckoning with illness, identity, and the grief of what was never given.
Her approach is nonjudgmental and centered on helping people return to themselves, reclaim their voice, and reconnect with their sense of agency. Whether someone arrives with a specific pain or with a quiet stirring that something needs to change, Kristyn welcomes them and invites them to begin that work together. It can be the start of something real.
For many common concerns – such as stress, anxiety, depression, relationship challenges, or managing life transitions – online therapy can be just as effective as traditional in-person care. Research and clinical experience support its usefulness for these types of issues.
One major benefit is convenience. People can connect with a therapist in the format that best fits their life – video calls, phone sessions, live chat, or in-app messaging – which often makes it easier to attend consistently and integrate therapy into a busy schedule.
Licensed professionals provide online therapy, and if someone decides another therapist would be a better match, it is possible to switch to a different provider. For many, online therapy offers a flexible, accessible way to pursue support and progress.
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