About Jenny

I am a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (LMFT) and Oklahoma Board Certified LMFT Supervisor, with over fifteen years of experience in the mental health field. I hold a Master’s degree in Counseling (Marital and Family Emphasis) from Mid-America Christian University and a Bachelor’s degree in Human and Family Services from Southwestern Christian University. I am also an iEQ9 Integrated Enneagram Accredited Practitioner, with additional in-depth training and experience in temperament and the 16 personalities, including completion of the APTi Type Coaching Using Multiple Models Certificate program.

My practice is informed by both formal theological training and advanced clinical education. In addition to my clinical training in counseling and family systems, I’ve completed undergraduate and graduate-level preparation for Christian ministry across multiple areas of study, including biblical studies, theology, hermeneutics, apologetics, pastoral counseling, and spiritual formation. This background allows me to engage faith with discernment and reverence for Scripture, while remaining clinically precise and trauma-informed.

Outside the therapy room, I am a wife of eighteen years, a mother of three incredible sons, and the human companion of a Pit mix named Veyda, who is convinced she is a person. Music has always been life-giving for me. I love to sing and occasionally play the guitar, and you’ll often find me listening to Indie, Indie Folk, Alternative (especially the 90s), or Praise and Worship. Solitude matters deeply to me, and I genuinely enjoy reading, painting, and organizing. Yes, organizing.

I am reflective and noetic by nature, drawn to truth and courage, and to the willingness to remain with what is real, whether in pain, in faith, or in complexity. Years of listening, both professionally and personally, have formed these ways of being. They shape my approach not as credentials, but as posture.

I am also very human. I am not unfamiliar with stumbling, suffering, doubt, or disruption. I have lived through loss, seasons of spiritual questioning and dark nights of the soul, physical illness, anxiety, toxic work environments, marriage and parenting challenges, learning boundaries, family dysfunction, and relationships that caused harm. I know what it is like to endure, to rebuild, and to grow steadier through what was never chosen, as well as through choices that required reckoning and change.

Because of this, I bring both strength and empathy into the therapy room. I am able to sit with what is heavy, think analytically when things feel tangled, and help create understanding, containment, and direction in the midst of distress. I believe restoration is possible not because life has been easy for me, but because I have learned how to remain honest, anchored, and tenacious through what is hard.

Many of the individuals I work with are insightful, conscientious, and deeply caring, often high-functioning on the outside while carrying unaddressed grief, anxiety, trauma, or spiritual disorientation beneath the surface. Many have spent much of their lives being responsible and emotionally alert long before it was fair or necessary, and are weary of carrying more than their share.

My framework is trauma-informed and faith-integrated, centered on agency, discernment, and advocacy rather than compliance, endurance, or silence. I believe meaningful growth requires honesty, including the willingness to name harm without protecting systems at the expense of people.

In my experience, change is not about fixing what is broken, but about creating enough support for what has been hidden or burdened to be seen and released. I work best with clients who are reflective, motivated, and willing to engage in meaningful work. I am not a fast-fix therapist, and I do not offer surface-level reassurance. What I do offer is attunement, compassion, and a grounded presence.

At its core, my approach rests on the belief that emotional health and spiritual maturity are not separate pursuits. Growth involves learning to ascertain what belongs to you and what does not, so you can live with greater freedom, congruence, and peace. I believe God does not bypass our personalities. He authored them. Therapy, at its best, becomes a space to listen more attentively for His voice, honor how you were uniquely made, and lay down what you were never meant to carry, making room for a life shaped by freedom and purpose.