Holistic Jungian therapist specializing in trauma and relationships
Hello to you! I am a licensed clinical social worker in Pennsylvania with 17 years of experience working as a psychotherapist. I have worked with clients presenting with a wide range of concerns including anxiety, mood issues, identity development, trauma, and struggle to find meaning and purpose, to name a few. I earned my Master of Social Work from the University of Pennsylvania in 2005, and I take seriously the importance of ongoing learning with regard to theory and practice of psychotherapy.
My therapy style is warm and engaging with a strengths-based and client-centered approach. I especially resonate with an understanding of human experience grounded in Humanist and Existentialist Theory and Therapy. In working with clients in the process of the support, growth, change, or healing that they are seeking, I incorporate strategies and techniques from a variety of approaches like Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy and Mindfulness. I also value the incorporation of a social justice-oriented understanding of the ways that clients’ concerns may be caused or effected by systemic oppression such as racism, homophobia, transphobia, misogyny, ablism, ageism, or any other ways that clients’ identities may experience difficulty in the world.
I am a White, queer, able-bodied ciswoman (pronouns: she/her) of European descent, living and working in Pennsylvania which is the traditional land of the Lenni Lenape people.
Licensed · Professional · Cancel Anytime
Meghan Sullivan is a licensed clinical social worker practicing in Pennsylvania who offers compassionate, strengths-based psychotherapy. She brings a warm, engaging presence to sessions and focuses on a client-centered approach that supports each person’s goals for growth, change, or healing.
She works with a broad range of concerns, including stress and anxiety, LGBT-related issues, family conflicts, self-esteem challenges, coping with life changes, addictions, relationship difficulties, trauma and abuse, grief, intimacy-related concerns, sleeping disorders, parenting issues, anger management, career difficulties, bipolar disorder, depression, compassion fatigue, and ADHD.
Meghan grounds her work in Humanist and Existentialist theory while integrating practical strategies from approaches such as cognitive-behavioral therapy and mindfulness. She values ongoing professional learning and brings a social justice lens to therapy, acknowledging how systemic forms of oppression – including racism, homophobia, transphobia, misogyny, ableism, and ageism – can affect clients’ experiences. She uses she/her pronouns and lives and works in Pennsylvania.
With three years of clinical experience, Meghan is credentialed as a licensed clinical social worker in Pennsylvania and aims to create a supportive environment where clients feel seen and empowered to make meaningful changes.
Many people wonder whether remote therapy can truly help. For common concerns such as stress, anxiety, depression, relationship challenges, or navigating life changes, online therapy has been shown to be just as effective as traditional in-person sessions.
One major benefit is flexibility – clients can meet with a therapist in the way that suits them best, whether by video call, phone, live chat, or in-app messaging. This flexibility can make it easier to fit therapy into a busy schedule and to stay connected over time.
Therapists offering online services are licensed professionals, and if someone feels they need a different therapeutic fit they can switch to another provider. For many people, remote therapy provides an accessible, practical option for receiving professional mental health support.
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