Therapists Beginning With Q in Vermont
Kristin Quill
Clinical Social Work/Therapist, LICSW, PMH-C
South Burlington, VT 05403
Waitlist for new clients
I specialize in supporting individuals 18+ who are navigating perinatal mood/anxiety disorders, matrescence, fertility challenges, pregnancy and infant loss, adoption, surrogacy, and parenthood. I draw from various evidence-based models, prioritizing collaboration, compassion, trust, humor, and warmth. While the majority of my work centers the perinatal community, I also hold a small caseload of individuals struggling with trauma, depression, anxiety, life transitions, young adulthood, grief, and difficulties with belonging and self-worth.
I specialize in supporting individuals 18+ who are navigating perinatal mood/anxiety disorders, matrescence, fertility challenges, pregnancy and infant loss, adoption, surrogacy, and parenthood. I draw from various evidence-based models, prioritizing collaboration, compassion, trust, humor, and warmth. While the majority of my work centers the perinatal community, I also hold a small caseload of individuals struggling with trauma, depression, anxiety, life transitions, young adulthood, grief, and difficulties with belonging and self-worth.
" The purpose of aging is to grow into your soul, the one you have been carrying all along, the one you had as a child."
From: The Time of the Child by Niall Williams.
I help adults struggling with anxiety and overwhelm find more peace, confidence, and a renewed sense of self. I have many years of counseling experience and have a deep appreciation for the challenges associated with healing from emotional patterns that, over time, are no longer useful. I respect the importance of setting clear boundaries to support a healthy therapeutic alliance. Confidentiality is the heart of a relationship built on trust.
" The purpose of aging is to grow into your soul, the one you have been carrying all along, the one you had as a child."
From: The Time of the Child by Niall Williams.
I help adults struggling with anxiety and overwhelm find more peace, confidence, and a renewed sense of self. I have many years of counseling experience and have a deep appreciation for the challenges associated with healing from emotional patterns that, over time, are no longer useful. I respect the importance of setting clear boundaries to support a healthy therapeutic alliance. Confidentiality is the heart of a relationship built on trust.
I’ve been working in the mental health field for close to two decades and have extensive experience working with diverse populations at the individual, family, and community levels. I’ve worked in for-profit and non-profit spaces, and spent a number of years in wilderness therapy. Over the course of eight years working in the field in Hawai’i, I developed a trauma-informed and person-centric approach, utilizing holistic health practices, rights of passage, goal-setting, horticulture therapy, mindfulness, and, when possible, personal training. My goal is to engage people in working towards their healthiest selves.
I’ve been working in the mental health field for close to two decades and have extensive experience working with diverse populations at the individual, family, and community levels. I’ve worked in for-profit and non-profit spaces, and spent a number of years in wilderness therapy. Over the course of eight years working in the field in Hawai’i, I developed a trauma-informed and person-centric approach, utilizing holistic health practices, rights of passage, goal-setting, horticulture therapy, mindfulness, and, when possible, personal training. My goal is to engage people in working towards their healthiest selves.
Sick people in this country have two jobs; fight to manage their illness, and fight the systems that are actively working against them. My goal is to provide a safe container in which chronically ill people feel heard as they process the trauma they continuously endure, to listen as they describe the detrimental effects of medical gaslighting, and to support them in rewriting their narrative in ways that empower them and restore autonomy to their lives.
Sick people in this country have two jobs; fight to manage their illness, and fight the systems that are actively working against them. My goal is to provide a safe container in which chronically ill people feel heard as they process the trauma they continuously endure, to listen as they describe the detrimental effects of medical gaslighting, and to support them in rewriting their narrative in ways that empower them and restore autonomy to their lives.