Hannah Rose Cash, MHC-LP
Hannah Rose holds a Masters in Mental Health Counseling from NYU with a clinical focus in gender and sexuality, having earned an advanced certificate in LGBTQ mental health and wellbeing. She approaches her practice with a lens that is grounded in psychodynamic theory, object relations theory, and systems theory. She incorporates an emphasis on a mind-body-connection in her work with clients with the aim of a better understanding of how our experiences, trauma, cultural influences, and unconscious thoughts impact the stories we come to hold within us and live in our lives.
Hannah Rose leads with an approach that is insight-oriented, empathy-driven, non-judgmental, strengths-based, holistic, and humanistic. Working collaboratively to uncover patterns and themes in things that feel stuck, she strives to empower clients to carve out a greater sense of possibility and balance to help people cultivate a new way of imagining the kind of life they might want for themselves.
Hannah Rose has experience working with people of all ages and walks of life, with a particular interest in working with college students and young adults. She has worked closely helping individuals navigate feelings around grief, breakups, gender, sexuality, searching for love, career, race, religion, separations, self-esteem, anxiety, depression, sexual abuse, trauma, creative process, complex relationships, and life transitions. Hannah Rose brings a gentle playfulness to her work, while utilizing a trauma-informed and anti-oppressive lens to help individuals connect more deeply to parts of themselves and their own creative capacity.
Hannah Rose believes strongly in the power of curiosity that leaves room for both complexity and nuance to exist. She sees psychotherapy as a powerful and courageous process of coming to more intimately understand a person's unique self and the experiences that have come to shape them.
Hannah Rose is driven by the importance of building a connection and relationship that is unique to herself and each of her clients. Believing that we are a collection of our experiences, she finds that creatively questioning old stories can unlock feelings that have been hidden away, integrate complexity, inspire newness and awaken a sense of wholeness. In bravely slowing, and allowing for an unearthing of feeling, there is a deepening of clarity, desire, and an inspiration of new possibilities that can be found.