I began my academic journey at Washington University in St. Louis studying Post-War Intellectual History, where I became deeply interested in the psychological and philosophical questions surrounding meaning, identity, freedom, and modern life. I later earned graduate degrees in Applied Clinical Psychology from The New School and Mental Health Counseling from New York University.
Today, I combine evidence-based psychological approaches with existential and philosophical insight to help men struggling with emotional disconnection, anxiety, burnout, and lack of meaning rebuild clarity, emotional stability, authentic confidence, and internal alignment.
My work focuses on the gap many men experience between external success and internal fulfillment, helping clients better understand themselves, break destructive patterns, and build lives that feel meaningful rather than merely functional.