Hello. I’m Max.
I focus on individuals, including many therapists, with a particular emphasis on gay and queer men and childhood trauma.
Much of this comes from lived experience. When it comes to being gay, I know what it’s like to grow up sensing something is different before there is language for it, to carry shame quietly, to mask, to wait, and to come out internally long before letting others in. I also know that coming out is not a single moment of relief, but often the beginning of a new, tender, and disorienting developmental phase.
With gay and queer men, this often means working with the exhaustion of masking, the impact of internalized shame, and the grief of development that had to happen later or in private. It also means honoring complexity. Masculinity and femininity, certainty and uncertainty, pride and fear, belonging and competitiveness can all exist inside of us without needing to be resolved into a single, clean identity.


