One pattern kept appearing throughout my work….

The men I met were intelligent, capable, and successful.

They had careers, families, and responsibilities. From the outside, they appeared to have built the lives they wanted.

Yet privately, many felt disconnected from themselves. Achievement had become a substitute for purpose. While they knew how to succeed, their success no longer felt meaningful.

That recurring pattern became the foundation of Modern Age.

My work combines evidence-based psychology with existential philosophy to help clients understand the deeper forces shaping their lives, break long-standing patterns, and build lives that feel authentic rather than merely functional.

Before becoming a therapist, I studied Post-War Intellectual History at Washington University in St. Louis, where I became fascinated by questions of 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, those academic influences shape the way I work: combining clinical psychology with philosophical insight and practical exercises to help successful men reconnect with purpose, agency, and themselves.

Begin Your Journey