All Therapists
Taylor Pettway, LMFT
“The wound is the place where the Light enters you.” – Rumi
There is power in seeking the help of others along our journey, and it is my hope that therapy can represent a unique healing environment, focused on your reality and your needs. The change that we all seek lies within our stories being validated and understood. As we witness the power of our stories in light of culture, race, gender, sexual orientation, and other intersections of identity through therapy, we partner in using your strengths to lessen your limitations. By developing your self-awareness, we can work to heal from past wounds, develop more understanding of your Self and those around you, and create better relationships.
Through our relationship, I hone an authentic, compassionate, firm, but calming presence where I can collaborate with you to examine, forgive, heal, and thrive. I am driven to provide therapeutic services to culturally diverse individuals, couples, co-parents, single-parent families, and other extended families struggling through a myriad of life transitions. Specifically, my areas of clinical focus include relational conflict, parenting and family sculpting with blended and single-parent families, men and women’s issues, communities of color, intergenerational trauma, systemic racism and oppression, and mindfulness body practices.
I am eager to bring a wealth of experiences to the room as your therapist. Not only do I hold my Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology and Creative Writing from Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia, I hold my Masters of Science in Marriage and Family Therapy from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. I am also certified by the Alabama Department of Education in Secondary English Language Arts Education, grades six through 12. I am honored to bring my integrative systemic training and perspective to our work together and look forward to partnering with you in your journey towards holistic healing.
SUPERVISOR-IN-TRAINING
So much of what I love about the work of therapy and supervision of therapy is the lens of awareness and metathinking that one develops about themselves, others, and the world around them. Whether it be bolstering your systemic, clinical functioning as a soon-to-be therapist or supporting your administrative services that present you as a professional to the public, supervisors in the field of marriage and family therapy have such a vast reach in the development of newly minted therapists. Helping you as the supervisee keep all voices in motion— the client’s neighborhood, the therapist’s own stress level, the setting where the therapy is provided — supports your own ability to keep context and its impact in the forefront.
Previously an educator, I well know the benefits of modeling behaviors for learners, and supervision should be a ripe learning environment, oscillating between support and challenge. As is my own personal custom, front-loading and developing an initial sound infrastructure for our supervisory process prior to engagement or in this case, bringing on you as a supervisee, is my preferred first step. Emphasizing distinctions, such as concerns that warrant self-of-the-therapist exploration versus personal therapy, the focus on the process of various conversations and interactions versus the content, and naming the many power dynamics that will arise, are also significant to my role as your supervisor. I hope to act as guide and teacher, mentor and coach as we engage in our supervisory relationship. From setting long and short-term goals with you to supporting you in implementing theory-driven therapy to holding an anti-racist framework, these specific goals for supervision are necessary when launching a culturally aware, clinically sound mental health professional out into the world.
I am both proud and grateful to be a student of what is now known as Integrative Systemic Therapy (IST) and The Family Institute at Northwestern University. Because of this training, I have had exposure to a breadth of relational therapy models, theories, and strategies. Culture and context, race and power, privilege and disadvantage are areas where I am also keen to examine both as a person and as a supervisor. If done with authenticity and consistency, contextual and cultural examinations in supervisory sessions will hopefully model the process by which to facilitate this experience with your clients. Through my emphasis on narrative therapy elements, the hope is that you will be able to collaborate in authoring your own story of development by identifying and fulfilling collaborative goals. Similar to my work with clients, my hope is to “pull back the curtain on the therapy and the supervision process” and to explain my various instructions and observations simply and succinctly. A supervisee who is equipped with both rationale and clear direction can not only develop within the framework of marriage and family therapy but can find their own therapist selves and way of practicing in this field.
Locations
Insurance
BCBS PPO, Aetna, United Healthcare
Languages
English
I identify as
Black
(773) 431-7397