
Have you experienced pregnancy loss due to miscarriage or termination for medical reasons, stillbirth, or loss of an infant within the first year of life? If so, I am so sorry for your loss. I know your pain is unbearable at the moment.
And I am here to help.
If “the unimaginable” has become your reality, you are in the right place. Even as a skilled therapist, I had no idea how to deal with the death of my newborn son. I was devastated. Overwhelmed. Shattered. I knew I needed help. But finding a grief therapist who specialized in infant loss proved difficult. Even more, finding a specialized grief therapist with lived experience proved impossible. While therapist lived experience is not necessary or common in therapy, being in the middle of "the unimaginable,” I wanted someone who could not only imagine my experience, but could actually understand the level of grief I was facing. I wanted to know from someone who had walked the path already that it was possible.
I never found what I was looking for. Because of my intimate knowledge of mental health treatment options, I was able to keep going by piecemealing my own treatment together. It was difficult and lonely. I do not wish the same for you. If you have experienced a pregnancy loss due to miscarriage or termination for medical reasons, stillbirth, or infant loss, I am here to help. I offer highly specialized, individualized, and evidence-based perinatal grief therapy as a trained professional, while also providing a compassionate, authentic, and understanding peer prospective.
KEEP GOING **
KEEP GOING **
I’ll love you forever,
I’ll like you for always,
As long as I’m living
my baby you’ll be.
-Love You Forever
by Robert Munsch

A Note to Grieving Fathers:
If you are a father who experienced a loss, I want you to know that it is ok that you are struggling too. I understand that following the loss of a pregnancy or the death of an infant, the mother’s emotional needs may be the “primary concern” of professionals, family, friends, and even you. Deep-rooted perceptions about traditional parental gender roles can lead to the false belief that a loss should impact men less than it does women. Please know this is ridiculous and unhelpful.
You are allowed to be hurting.
You are allowed to be broken.
You are allowed to need help.

Having a Baby After a Loss?
A baby following a pregnancy loss due to miscarriage or termination for medical reasons, stillbirth, or infant loss, is often referred to as a “rainbow baby.” As the name suggests, a rainbow baby is a beautiful gift following a destructive storm. However, due to the trauma of loss, the pregnancy, delivery, and early days of infancy of a rainbow baby can be extremely difficult for parents. This was my experience. But it doesn’t have to be yours. I am here to help you differential between “normal” new parent concerns and trauma responses, manage your emotional distress, and enjoy your beautiful rainbow.
