Relational Therapist Seattle: The Relationship Is the Work
Relational therapy begins from the premise that we are formed in relationship and can only be changed in relationship. Not as a philosophical position. As a clinical one.
If you have been in therapy and felt like your therapist was applying techniques to you rather than being a person in the room with you, you may be looking for relational psychotherapy in Seattle. There is a difference between a therapist who uses the relationship as a tool and a therapist for whom the relationship is the work itself.
What relational therapy actually looks like
I am not a blank screen. I pay attention to what happens between us: the moments when something connects, the moments when something closes off, the thing you almost said but redirected, the way the energy in the room shifted when you mentioned a particular person. I bring what I notice into the conversation so we can think about it together.
This is not the same as a therapist who reflects your words back at you or nods and takes notes. Relational therapy is alive. The relationship between us becomes the material. Not because I make it about me, but because the patterns that live in all your relationships will eventually show up here, between us, where we can actually work with them in real time.
A session might involve sitting with something that is hard to name. It might involve noticing that you apologized for taking up space when you did not need to, and asking what that is about. It might involve me sharing that I noticed something shift in you and wondering together what that was. The work is less about what you report from your life outside and more about what is happening inside the room.
Why the relationship heals
Most of the wounds people carry were created in relationship. The mother who could not attune. The father who was present in body and absent everywhere else. The early environments where it was not safe to have needs, to feel angry, to take up space, to be uncertain, to be imperfect and still be loved. These injuries do not live only in memory. They live in the body, in the nervous system, in the automatic patterns that organize your relationships before you have time to think.
Insight helps. Understanding where a pattern came from is not nothing. But it is often not enough on its own. The knowledge that your difficulty receiving care came from a mother who punished vulnerability does not, by itself, make receiving care feel safe. What changes that is experience. The lived, repeated, embodied experience of a different kind of relationship.
In relational psychotherapy in Seattle, that experience happens here. You discover over time, not through being told but through living it, that your needs do not drive me away. That your anger does not destroy the connection. That you can be uncertain and I will not lose respect for you. That you can push back and I will not collapse or retaliate. These discoveries, made in the body over time, are what change the underlying structure. Not just what you know about yourself, but how you are organized inside.
The goal is not insight about your patterns. It is the transformation of the patterns themselves.
The theoretical roots
Relational therapy as I practice it is rooted in the relational psychoanalytic tradition: Winnicott on holding and the capacity to be alone in the presence of another, Fairbairn on internal objects and the ways early relationships become templates for all future ones, and the contemporary relational analysts, Mitchell, Benjamin, Aron, on mutuality and recognition. The idea that healing requires not just a skilled technician but a genuine encounter between two people.
This is different from classical psychoanalysis, where the analyst remained deliberately opaque, and different from purely technique-driven approaches like CBT or DBT, where the focus is on changing thought patterns or building skills. Relational therapy holds that what changes people most deeply is being in a real relationship with someone who can meet them, hold them, and stay present with what is difficult.
Who relational therapy is for
People who have tried therapy before and felt like something was missing. People who left feeling understood but unchanged. People who sensed that what they needed was not a protocol but a person.
People carrying the mother wound, or attachment trauma more broadly: the longing for a kind of holding they may never have received, the grief that has no funeral, the compulsive self-reliance that developed when needing things was unsafe.
People in long-term patterns they cannot seem to exit: the same kind of relationship recurring, the same dynamic at work, the same internal critic running the same script no matter how much they understand it intellectually.
People who are high-functioning and privately exhausted. People who have built lives that look right from the outside and have started to notice, quietly, that those lives do not hold them.
If you are searching for relational psychotherapy in Seattle, WA and wondering whether this approach is right for you, the most honest answer is: the way to find out is to talk.
Frequently asked questions about relational therapy
How is relational therapy different from CBT or other approaches?
CBT and similar approaches focus primarily on changing thought patterns, behaviors, and skills. They are structured, often time-limited, and the therapist takes a more expert role. Relational therapy is interested in what lives underneath those patterns and what created them. The therapist is less an expert delivering a protocol and more a person engaged in a genuine encounter. Where CBT aims to change what you think and do, relational therapy aims to change the underlying structure that makes those patterns feel necessary.
What is the difference between relational therapy and psychodynamic therapy?
They overlap significantly. Psychodynamic therapy takes the unconscious seriously and is interested in how the past shapes the present. Relational therapy extends this by placing the therapeutic relationship itself at the center, not just as a vehicle for insight but as the primary site of healing. In practice, most relational therapists also work psychodynamically, and most depth-oriented psychodynamic therapists work relationally. The distinction matters more theoretically than clinically.
What does relational therapy help with?
Relational therapy is particularly well-suited for people working with attachment wounds, the mother wound, chronic relationship patterns, anxiety rooted in early relational injury, the difficulty receiving care or being seen, and the loneliness that can exist even inside a full life. It is also the approach I use with clients navigating psychedelic integration and with people in tech whose burnout is asking a deeper question than career coaching can answer.
How long does relational therapy take?
Relational therapy is generally longer-term work. The patterns it addresses developed over years, sometimes decades, and they change through the accumulated experience of a sustained relationship, not through a brief intervention. Some clients find what they need in a year. Many continue longer because the work keeps opening into new territory. Sessions are weekly, sometimes twice weekly. There is no predetermined length. We check in together about how it is going, and you are always free to decide what feels right.
Is relational therapy done in person or online?
I offer both in-person sessions in Seattle and secure telehealth for clients throughout Washington State. For relational work specifically, in-person has advantages: the room, the body, the quality of presence are all part of the material. But strong relational work is possible through telehealth, and for many clients it is the more practical option. We can talk about what makes sense for you.
The practical details
Sessions are $175 and are weekly, sometimes twice weekly. I see clients on Fridays, 8 AM to 4 PM. I offer in-person sessions in Seattle and secure telehealth throughout Washington State. I am out-of-network with insurance and can provide superbills for clients with out-of-network benefits. A limited number of reduced-fee slots are available.
The practice is opening in August 2026. I am currently accepting consultation calls and building a waitlist. If something on this page is resonating, I would welcome a conversation.
Related
Psychodynamic Therapy · Relational Trauma · Body-Aware Therapy
If something here is resonating, I would welcome a conversation.
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