Good therapy is uncomfortable. That's how you know it's working.
I'm not here to tell you what you want to hear. I'm here to help you figure out why you keep ending up in the same place — and what to do about it.
The behavior is usually the last thing that changes.
If you're focused only on the behavior — the drinking, the conflict, the shutting down — you're working at the wrong level. Something is driving it. That's where the actual work is.
Insight alone doesn't calm a nervous system.
You can understand your patterns with clinical precision and still feel stuck. Knowing why you do something and actually shifting it are completely different operations.
Change without buy-in just produces better liars.
Change that isn't intrinsically motivated doesn't hold — it performs. The underground version of a problem is always worse than the original.
These principles shape how I work across individual therapy, couples work, and addiction counseling.
Why I do this work.
I've been thinking about what makes people change my whole life — what breaks them, what holds them together, and why some people walk away from hard things differently than others.
That curiosity led me to addictions work first, where I spent years in treatment settings learning what actually moves people — not just what stabilizes them temporarily. I opened Miller Counseling in 2021 to do that work on my own terms, with clients ready to go deeper than symptom management.
I keep a small caseload on purpose. Not as a selling point — because I've thought about what kind of work I want to do and who I want to do it with, and this is the answer I keep coming back to.
"The gap between how things look and how they actually feel — that's where most of my clients live."
On High Achievers"I'm not interested in therapy that makes you feel better for an hour and changes nothing by Thursday."
On The Work"I'll tell you in the consultation if I don't think I'm the right person. That's not a failure — it's the job."
On FitRelational. Emotion-focused. No fixed script.
The approach shifts based on what's in the room. These are the frameworks I draw from — never a protocol.
- Emotionally Focused Therapy
- Internal Family Systems
- Psychodynamic
- Narrative Therapy
- Nervous System Regulation
See how this applies in practice on the individual therapy and couples therapy pages.
I show up in the room.
For a long time I kept a lot out of the room. Not dishonestly — it felt professional. But somewhere along the way I noticed that the sessions where something real happened were the ones where I let myself actually feel what was in the room. Not talk about it. Just feel it, and let the client see that.
I'm more emotionally present now than I used to be. Not as self-disclosure — I'm not sharing my life. But I've stopped managing my reactions out of the conversation. If something lands, it lands. Clients notice. It changes what's possible.
The official version, for the record.
Licensure matters — it's the floor, not the ceiling.
Looking for coaching rather than therapy? Visit Miller Coaching Method.
Questions about rates or what to expect? FAQs page →
Sounds like a fit?
Let's find out for sure.
A free 15-minute consultation is a no-pressure way to ask questions, get a feel for how I work, and decide if this is the right room for you.