Clinical Therapy Consulation and Supervision in NYC and CO - LPC, LMHC & EMDR
As a therapist, you’re trained to hold others but that doesn’t mean you should hold everything alone. Clinical therapy consultation and supervision is a space to deepen your clinical thinking, strengthen your embodied and somatic presence, and reconnect with your confidence and intuition in the work.
I offer clinical consultation and supervision for therapists in NYC and Colorado, including LPCs, LMHCs, LCSWs and EMDR-trained therapists who want to integrate a more somatic, body-aware lens into their clinical work. I also provide EMDR consultation hours for clinicians pursuing certification, with an emphasis on embodied regulation, nervous system tracking, and relational attunement throughout EMDR phases. Whether you’re early in your career, mid-career and refining your voice, or seasoned and feeling stuck or depleted, this work supports you in becoming more grounded, responsive, and self-trusting in the room.
My approach blends somatic and embodied practice, attachment-informed therapy, trauma-responsive frameworks, and EMDR-informed clinical thinking. I support clinicians in learning how to track both the client’s nervous system and their own, use embodied regulation as an in-the-moment clinical tool, and integrate somatic awareness into assessment, case formulation, and intervention. Rather than focusing only on technique or protocol, we pay close attention to how regulation, attunement, and relational presence shape the therapeutic process for your clients and for you.
Formal supervision hours toward licensure (LPC, LMHC) may be available on a case-by-case basis; most work is offered as clinical consultation and support rather than evaluative supervision.
What is therapy supervision?
Therapy consultation and supervision is a collaborative, reflective space designed to support your clinical development as a therapist. Unlike productivity-focused, administrative, or compliance-driven supervision, this work centers your embodied experience in the room, your clinical voice, and the relational field between you and your clients.
In consultation and supervision, we focus on:
- How your nervous system responds moment-to-moment in sessions
- How to deepen attunement, presence, and relational clarity
- How to integrate somatic awareness and embodied regulation into your clinical decision-makin
- how to navigate trauma-informed and attachment-based work with integrity, confidence, and flexibility
Rather than emphasizing performance or “doing it right,” this work supports your internal capacity grounding, discernment, and self-trust so you can work more confidently with complex clients, ethical questions, countertransference, and your evolving professional identity. Consultation becomes a space to slow down, listen to the body, and refine how you practice therapy, not just what techniques you use.
Most common goals of therapy supervision
Therapists often seek therapy supervision or clinical consultation when they want to:
- Strengthen clinical confidence and therapeutic presence so they feel steadier and more grounded in sessions
- Integrate trauma-informed, somatic, or EMDR-aligned frameworks in ways that feel embodied rather than rigid or performative
- Navigate complex or stuck cases with greater clarity, structure, and nervous system awareness
- Understand countertransference and emotional activation without self-judgment or over-intellectualizing
- Build nervous system regulation in the therapy room for themselves as clinicians, not just for clients
- Deepen relational skills and attunement, especially in moments of rupture, uncertainty, or intensity
- Receive grounded, supportive consultation instead of holding clinical responsibility alone
- Clarify values, ethics, and clinical voice, so their work feels aligned, sustainable, and authentic
If you’re wanting to grow in depth, steadiness, and self-trust as a clinician, therapy supervision and consultation can anchor your development supporting both your clinical skill and your embodied way of being in the room.
How do I know if I need therapy supervision?
You may benefit from therapy supervision or clinical consultation if:
- You feel unsure, overwhelmed, or isolated in your clinical decision-making
- You work with trauma, attachment, dissociation, or somatic approaches and want deeper support integrating the work
- You’re trained in EMDR and want a space to think through cases with more flexibility, embodiment, and attunement OR working towards EMDRIA certification hours
- You want to feel more confident supporting complex or high-impact client presentations
- You’re seeking LPC or LMHC supervision hours in Colorado or NYC (available on a case-by-case basis)
- You want to develop a more grounded, embodied clinical presence rather than relying solely on technique
- You need a space where you get to be supported, regulated, and reflected not just your clients
If you’re longing for deeper support, reflective practice, and a collaborative, non-evaluative supervisory relationship, this space is designed for you.
How I support you with therapy supervision in NYC & CO
My approach to therapy supervision and clinical consultation is warm, relational, collaborative, and deeply somatic. I help you feel grounded and resourced in your clinical decisions rather than rushed, overwhelmed, or second-guessing yourself. This work centers not only what you’re doing in the room, but how you are experiencing the work in your body and nervous system.
Together, we work with:
- Somatic and nervous system–informed supervision to support your regulation and presence during sessions
- Trauma-informed frameworks for navigating complex, layered, or high-impact cases
- EMDR-informed consultation and certification support for integrating bilateral stimulation with somatic awareness, nervous system tracking, and relational attunement
- Attachment-based exploration of therapeutic relationships, including rupture, repair, and relational dynamics
- Ethical guidance grounded in nuance, care, and clinical discernment rather than fear or rule-following
- Support for countertransference, intuition, and relational patterns, helping you understand what’s being evoked in the room
- Embodied skills to help you stay steady with intensity, uncertainty, or emotional activation for both you and your clients
The goal isn’t to help you “perform” as a therapist or get it right. It’s to support you in becoming a grounded, attuned, embodied clinician one who trusts their nervous system, clinical judgment, and relational presence over time
What topics can we talk about in therapy supervision?
Therapy supervision and clinical consultation can support you with:
- Trauma-informed case conceptualization, with attention to nervous system states, pacing, and how trauma lives in the body not just the narrative
- EMDR-informed clinical thinking, including phase-based planning, resourcing, and tracking somatic cues during bilateral work
- Somatic and body-based approaches to therapy, helping you integrate bottom-up awareness even if your primary training was cognitive or insight-oriented
- Ethical decision-making and clinical judgment, grounded in both clinical reasoning and embodied signals like urgency, pressure, or shutdown
- Countertransference and nervous system activation, exploring how your body responds to clients’ material and how regulation supports clinical clarity
- Working with attachment injuries, dissociation, and relational trauma, while tracking cues of safety, activation, collapse, or proximity in the room
- Developing your clinical identity and voice, including trusting your embodied intuition rather than overriding it with self-doubt
- Cultivating grounded therapeutic presence, using somatic awareness to stay steady, responsive, and attuned during intensity
Navigating burnout, boundaries, and emotional sustainability, with practical embodied strategies to support your nervous system as a clinician
Therapy supervision becomes a space to integrate clinical skill, somatic awareness, and relational presence so your work feels grounded, responsive, and sustainable, not just technically correct.
How it works
Initial consultation
We’ll connect for a free consultation to see if we’re a good fit. Here we’ll briefly talk through what you’re needing, my approach and address any logistical questions.
Getting started
You’ll get access to my secure client portal, where you’ll be able to schedule your first appointment and complete intake paperwork so I can understand your history, context, and needs a little more.
Building our foundation
We’ll begin with at least four consecutive sessions. This gives us time to establish our working relationship, identify your goals, and see the full picture of what it’s like to be you. During this phase, we’ll also explore whether EMDR could be a good fit for your healing process, or if other somatic and movement-based approaches might better support your needs. From there, we can adjust frequency together, and if I think less often isn’t in your best interest, I’ll let you know with a clear clinical recommendation.
Therapy supervision specialist in NYC & CO (LPC, LMHC & EMDR-informed)
I’m Stefanie Raccuglia, a somatic therapist and EMDR practitioner offering therapy supervision and clinical consultation for LPCs, LMHCs, and pre-licensed clinicians in Colorado and New York. My supervision integrates somatic psychology, trauma-responsive and attachment-informed care, EMDR-informed clinical thinking, movement-based awareness, and relational depth to support you in strengthening your clinical identity while staying connected to your own nervous system and values.
I work with therapists who want to feel steadier, more embodied, and more confident in the room whether you’re building foundational skills, integrating somatic and EMDR approaches, or expanding your capacity to hold complex trauma work without losing yourself in the process.
Tips & resources for therapists before starting supervision
- These reflective, body-aware practices can help you feel more grounded and prepared as you begin therapy supervision or clinical consultation:
- Pause and check in with yourself: notice where you feel overwhelmed, unsure, or activated in your clinical work without trying to fix it yet
- Track your nervous system in sessions: observe what tends to activate you, shut you down, or pull you into urgency, over-responsibility, or doubt
- Reflect on challenging cases: jot down patterns, questions, or moments where you felt stuck, uncertain, or emotionally impacted
- Clarify your goals for supervision: confidence, somatic integration, trauma or EMDR support, ethical clarity, boundaries, or sustainability
- Create micro-moments of regulation: brief grounding, breath, or movement practices between or after sessions to support integration
- Protect time for reflection: even five minutes after a session can help your nervous system settle and your clinical thinking deepen
- Reach toward support: supervision is not a sign you’re struggling it’s a way to practice not holding complexity alone
These practices aren’t a replacement for supervision, but they can help your nervous system slow down and become more receptive so consultation feels supportive, spacious, and generative rather than urgent or evaluative.

Hi there, I´m Stefanie Raccuglia
Clinically, I'm a Licensed Professional Counselor (CO), Licensed Mental Health Counselor (NY), Registered Dance/Movement Therapist, and EMDRIA Certified EMDR therapist.

Psychotherapy in Colorado and New York - Pricing
Individual Therapy
- 55–60 minute sessions — ongoing weekly or biweekly therapy.
- 85–90 minute sessions — extra time for EMDR or when you want more room to process and integrate.
- Half-day intensives — immersive, extended sessions where you can experience, move, and process at a deeper embodied pace, then circle back to integrate. These offer a reset that weekly therapy alone can’t always reach.
*Rates vary by state. We’ll go over exact rates during your free initial consultation, along with any options for sliding scale (limited spots) and out-of-network reimbursement.
Professional Consultation & Supervision
For therapists, coaches, and providers who want to deepen their clinical work.
- EMDR Consultation — As an EMDRIA Consultant-in-Training, I provide consultation hours that count toward EMDRIA certification. Together we’ll refine your skills, strengthen case conceptualization, and grow your confidence with this modality.
- Embodied Professional Consultation — For providers who want to integrate a somatic lens into their work. We’ll explore interventions, case material, and professional presence from an embodied perspective, helping you expand beyond cognitive approaches and bring the body more fully into the room.
FAQ
Do you offer supervision hours for LPC or LMHC licensure?
Formal supervision hours toward licensure may be available on a case-by-case basis for LPC candidates in Colorado and LMHC clinicians in New York. We’ll discuss your training needs, state requirements, and whether formal supervision or clinical consultation is the best fit while prioritizing reflective, ethically grounded clinical growth rather than evaluative oversight.
Do you offer EMDR consultation hours for clinicians seeking certification?
Yes. I provide EMDR consultation hours for clinicians pursuing EMDR certification, in alignment with EMDRIA guidelines and my current scope of practice. Consultation supports case conceptualization, phase-based treatment planning, resourcing, pacing, and integration of EMDR with somatic and attachment-informed approaches.
My focus is helping clinicians move beyond rigid protocol use and into embodied, attuned EMDR practice including tracking nervous system responses, somatic cues, and relational dynamics for both client and therapist. This supports ethical, sustainable EMDR work that feels grounded rather than overwhelming.
What is the difference between clinical consultation and therapy supervision?
Therapy supervision is typically structured, ongoing, and connected to licensure requirements. Clinical consultation is more flexible and focuses on case conceptualization, EMDR-informed and somatic clinical thinking, ethical decision-making, and professional development regardless of licensure status. Consultation is collaborative and non-evaluative, offering support without formal oversight.
Can you support clinicians who feel overwhelmed, activated, or burned out?
Yes. Many clinicians seek consultation or supervision when they feel emotionally activated, depleted, or unsure how to hold complex client material. We integrate somatic and nervous systems–based tools to support regulation, boundaries, and sustainability—so you can stay present and grounded without carrying everything alone.
What approaches do you use in therapy supervision and consultation?
My work integrates somatic and embodied psychology, trauma-responsive and attachment-informed frameworks, EMDR-informed clinical thinking, movement-based awareness, and relational depth. This approach supports clinicians in strengthening clinical confidence, nervous system regulation, ethical discernment, and embodied intuition in the therapy room.
Good Faith Estimate
Beginning January 1, 2022, you have the right to receive a “Good Faith Estimate” explaining how much your medical care will cost.
Under the law, health care providers need to give patients who don’t have insurance or who are not using insurance an estimate of the bill for medical items and services.
You have the right to receive a Good Faith Estimate for the total expected cost of any non-emergency items or services. This includes related costs like medical tests, prescription drugs, equipment, and hospital fees.
Make sure your health care provider gives you a Good Faith Estimate in writing at least 1 business day before your medical service or item. You can also ask your health care provider, and any other provider you choose, for a Good Faith Estimate before you schedule an item or service.
If you receive a bill that is at least $400 more than your Good Faith Estimate, you can dispute the bill.
Make sure to save a copy or picture of your Good Faith Estimate.
Colorado- For questions or more information about your right to a Good Faith Estimate, visit www.cms.gov/nosurprises or call the Colorado Division of Insurance at 303-894-7490 or 1-800-930-3745
New York- For questions or more information about your right to a Good Faith Estimate, visit www.cms.gov/nosurprises or call the New York State Department of Financial Services at 1-800-342-3736 or 212-480-6400.
What approaches do you use in therapy supervision and consultation?
