Supervision
Supervision is an essential part of ethical and sustainable therapeutic practice. At its core, supervision is about being witnessed, supported and held in service of the client. It offers a space where the therapist can pause, reflect and make sense of what is unfolding in their work, ensuring that care remains attuned, responsible and alive.
For me, supervision is not simply about oversight or case management. It is a relational and embodied process that supports clarity, integrity and continued learning. When supervision is well held, both the practitioner and their clients benefit from the additional containment and perspective it provides.
WHAT DOES SUPERVISION WITH ME LOOK LIKE?
Supervision sessions are grounded in dialogue, while also making space for bodily awareness, felt sense and what may be emerging in the wider relational field. Rather than rushing to interpretation or solution, we stay with what is present in the material you bring, allowing clarity to unfold over time.
Attention is given to the client’s process, your responses as the practitioner, and the dynamics moving between you. Somatic cues, sensations and subtle shifts are often tracked, as these can hold important information about what is not yet fully conscious in the work.
Where relevant, dreams, images and intuitive impressions are also welcomed, particularly when they help illuminate transference, countertransference or unspoken dynamics within the therapeutic relationship.
A SOMATIC AND RELATIONAL APPROACH
While supervision is not therapy, it is still a relationship. Our personal history, blind spots and habitual patterns inevitably shape the way we work with clients. Supervision provides a space where these dynamics can be noticed and explored, always in service of ethical and effective practice.
The body plays a central role in my supervisory work. By slowing down and attending to the somatic experience, supervision can reveal material that might otherwise be missed and support practitioners to meet their clients with greater clarity, humility and care.
I work best with practitioners who are curious, reflective and willing to engage honestly with their inner and relational processes.
SUPERVISION TRAINING AND WIDER WORK
In 2025, I am also offering this training in collaboration with the Minded Institute, designed for experienced practitioners who wish to deepen their capacity as supervisors, with particular attention to somatic awareness, relational dynamics and ethical responsibility.
Further details about this training can be found here:
https://themindedinstitute.com/product/supervision-training/
FEES
Supervision sessions with me are offered as follows:
- One-to-one supervision:£100 for 50 minutes
- Group supervision:£200 for 90 minutes
Alongside my own supervision practice, I am the clinical lead for a team of supervisors within Integration Psychotherapy Services (IPS). I have trained these supervisors directly and continue to oversee their work to ensure supervision is held within the same embodied, relational and ethical framework.
For practitioners seeking supervision at a different level of accessibility, supervision through IPS is available at the following rates:
- One:one or group £70–£100 for 50 minutes
- One:one or group £130 for 90 minutes
I remain closely involved in the structure and quality of supervision across IPS and support practitioners to find the most appropriate supervisory relationship for their work, experience and context.
Please contact me to discuss either options.
Train in Somatic Supervision
Explore my next Professional Supervision Training: A Somatic Approach (NCIP CPD-accredited), offered in collaboration with The Minded Institute

