Clinical Supervision for LCSWA’s

Supervision & Consulting with Stephany Mejia, MSW, LCSW

✨ A space to explore your therapist identity
✨ Neurodivergent & LGBTQ+ affirming
✨ Centering first-time therapists & first-generation professionals

We offer specialized supervision for provisionally licensed therapists who are:

🌿 Building their professional identity
🌈 Navigating how their lived experience informs their clinical work
📚 Learning to hold space for clients and themselves
🧠 Seeking support through the challenges of licensure, workplace systems, and clinical decision-making

🧠 Provide guidance to provisionally licensed LCSW’s to make ethical and clinically sound decisions in clinical practice

This is more than supervision—
It’s a space to grow, reflect, and find your voice as a therapist.

First Generation Therapist

As a first-generation professional, you may be navigating multiple roles and expectations at once—carrying the hopes of your family, translating between cultures, managing imposter syndrome, and working in systems that weren’t built with your experiences in mind. You deserve support that honors your story, not just your clinical skill set.

I believe that supervision isn’t just about checking boxes for licensure—
It’s a space to explore and shape who you are becoming as a therapist.

Whether you're newly licensed or still in the process, developing your therapist identity is a deeply personal and evolving journey. You’re not just learning interventions or ethics—you’re learning how to hold space, how to trust your voice, how to show up in a way that feels both grounded and authentic.

Professional identity building means recognizing your role within a larger system—while also redefining what kind of clinician you want to be. It means navigating boundaries, systems, cultural expectations, and your own internal process. It’s learning how to lead with integrity while honoring the communities you serve and the lived experience you bring.

Build your therapist Identity

Supervision at Healing Seeds Therapy is not a one-size-fits-all experience.
It’s a space intentionally designed to affirm who you are—in all of your complexity, lived experience, cultural background, and ways of thinking, relating, and being in the world.

I recognize that many therapists-in-training carry parts of themselves that have been overlooked, silenced, or pathologized in traditional clinical spaces. Whether you're neurodivergent, queer, BIPOC, a first-gen professional, or navigating multiple cultural identities, you deserve supervision that validates your experience—not just your competence..

Neurodivergent Affirming Space

What It Looks Like in Supervision

In our work together, we explore:

  • Who you are—beyond the theories and treatment plans

  • What stories, values, and identities shape your lens as a clinician

  • How to work through doubt, imposter syndrome, or “perfectionism” that shows up in sessions

  • How to build a practice that reflects your politics, passions, and purpose

  • What it means to bring both professionalism and humanity into the room