LGBTQ+ Therapy

Queer Therapy from a Queer Therapist

Whether you are questioning, newly out, or just don't want to explain what "U-hauling" means, I've got you. You are welcome just as you are and in all that you may become.

Finding a therapist who actually gets you, not just tolerates to you, makes a difference. I am queer, I use they/them pronouns, and I am not going to ask you to educate me on the basics. We can skip straight to the work.

All Forms Therapy is located in Longmont, CO and offers virtual sessions to LGBTQ+ clients across Colorado.

LGBTQ+ Affirming Care Options

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Individual

Your identity is not a problem to be solved. But navigating a world that wasn't built for you can take a real toll, and you deserve space to work through that.

  • Explore your identity without judgment

  • Manage anxiety, depression, loss, and life changes

  • Self esteem, internalized shame, and self doubt

  • Minority stress and navigating a world not built for you

  • Move toward joy and authenticity

  • Coming out at school, to your loved ones, or to yourself

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Relationship

Queer relationships are real relationships — and they come with their own unique dynamics, joys, and challenges. Whether you're navigating non-monogamy, coming out within a partnership, or just hitting a rough patch, you don't need to explain your relationship structure before we can get to work.

  • Maintaining or coming back to connection

  • Coming out or transitioning while in a relationship

  • Nonmonogamy, polyamory, and all nontraditional relationship structures

  • Navigating a relationship without social scripts to follow

  • Recurring arguments and difficulty communicating

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Family

Whether you're a queer person navigating your family of origin or a family trying to show up better for a queer loved one, there is a way forward. It's not always easy, but it's worth it.

  • Coming back together after a hurtful coming out experience

  • Building a supportive and affirming family environment

  • Transitioning or coming out to parents, children, or siblings

  • Maintaining found family bonds and working through conflict

  • Differing intergenerational expectations about gender and sexuality