ABOUT ME
Erika Jordan is a graduate-level clinical psychology intern in her final year of training, currently working in a nonprofit mental health clinic. She works with children, adolescents, adults, and families, including court-involved clients, LGBTQ+ individuals, and those navigating complex trauma, identity stress, and long-standing relational patterns.
People rarely come to therapy because they lack insight.
They come because insight alone hasn’t changed what keeps repeating.
At the center of Erika’s work is a simple but often unsettling question:
Why do certain emotional and relational patterns persist, even when we want them to stop?
A Depth-Oriented Approach
Erika’s clinical foundation is grounded in psychodynamic and narrative therapy, with an integrative, trauma-informed lens. She does not approach people as problems to be fixed or behaviors to be corrected.
Human beings are complex, adaptive systems shaped by early relationships, social environments, and experiences that often live outside of conscious awareness. What appears as “stuckness” is frequently a nervous system doing exactly what it learned to do to survive.
Rather than applying formulas or forcing change, Erika works relationally and collaboratively, paying close attention to emotional tone, meaning, history, and context. Therapy unfolds at the pace of safety, not efficiency.
Change, in this framework, is not imposed.
It emerges when understanding, emotional safety, and agency begin to align.
A Sociological Lens, Without Losing the Individual
Erika holds a Bachelor’s degree in Sociology, which deeply informs her clinical perspective. She understands that personal distress does not exist in isolation. It often develops at the intersection of individual history and larger systemic pressures such as inequality, marginalization, chronic stress, trauma exposure, or unstable environments.
This lens allows Erika to meet clients with nuance and respect. She does not frame suffering as personal failure, nor does she remove accountability or agency. Instead, she helps clients understand why their responses make sense, while supporting them in choosing how they want to move forward.
Therapy here is not about blame or self-optimization.
It is about clarity, integration, and reclaiming authorship over one’s story.
Areas of Clinical Focus
Erika works with clients across the lifespan and has experience supporting individuals and families navigating:
- Complex and developmental trauma
- Attachment and relationship difficulties
- Identity exploration, including LGBTQ+ concerns
- Anxiety, depression, and emotional regulation
- Court-mandated and high-conflict family cases
- Narrative repair following interpersonal or institutional harm
Her therapeutic style is collaborative, emotionally attuned, and reflective. Clients often describe her as direct yet deeply compassionate, someone who can hold complexity without judgment or urgency.
Professional Background & Ongoing Training
Before entering the mental health field, Erika spent years working in entertainment and media, followed by over a decade as a coach and educator. These experiences sharpened her ability to listen closely, communicate clearly, and understand how identity, performance, and relational dynamics shape behavior.
She now brings those skills into the therapy room with clinical rigor, ethical care, and respect for the depth of the work.
Erika is on track to graduate in June and plans to continue her training toward a doctorate. She is committed to lifelong learning and to providing thoughtful, context-aware mental health care that honors both the individual and the world they live in.
If you want to check out my other sites Just A Click Away
Kisses,




























