Sorrel Johnson
Long Island University - Post Campus
Pronouns: she/her/hers
I am a clinical psychology doctoral candidate with experience in a range of settings, including university counseling centers, community mental health clinics, and hospitals. I have provided clinical services to individuals across the lifespan, addressing a wide range of mental health concerns. As a therapist, I take a collaborative, curious, and compassionate stance, with the goal of helping each person I work with feel seen, understood, and supported in their unique experience. In therapy, I strive to create a safe, authentic, and intimate space, where we can explore together who you are, where you’ve been, and what you are going through now. Through this process of exploration and self-understanding, clients often find the capacity to heal, grow, and make meaningful, constructive changes in their lives.
My clinical interests center on supporting people as they navigate life transitions, identity development, and relationship concerns. My approach to psychotherapy is trauma-informed and grounded in a relational psychodynamic framework. My work also incorporates ideas from a range of therapy models and schools of thought such as Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), constructivist, existential, systemic, and social justice perspectives.