Hannah Chapman
Psychotherapist
Hannah is a caring and down-to-earth therapist who creates a safe space for people of all ages — children, teens, and adults — to explore their experiences and grow. They bring a calm, intuitive presence to therapy and believe that every person already has wisdom within them. Hannah sees the ways we cope with life’s challenges not as flaws, but as smart adaptations to a complicated and sometimes overwhelming world.
Currently completing advanced training in Body Psychotherapy at Naropa University, Hannah blends somatic (body-based) practices with their rich background in dance and spiritual work. This means sessions often focus on helping you connect with your body, build resilience in your nervous system, and strengthen compassion for yourself.
Whether you are an adult navigating stress, trauma, identity, body image concerns, or existential questions, a teen facing social anxiety, school trauma, isolation, or bullying, or a child needing movement-based support to feel safe and understood, Hannah adapts therapy to meet you where you are. Their approach is relational, experiential, and grounded in respect for your unique values, needs, and interests. Hannah also supports clients in deconditioning from toxic relationships and religious conditioning, validating neurodivergence (including ADHD and autism as a style rather than only trying to act neurotypical), and helping teens with behavioral or substance use struggles.
Areas of Focus & Approach
- Somatic (body-based) therapy
- Trauma-informed support
- Social anxiety and body image challenges
- Identity development in both teens and adults
- Neurodiversity-affirming perspective (ADHD & Autism-validating)
- Nervous system regulation and resilience
- Relational healing and communication
- LGBTQIA+, queer, and trans affirming care
- Deconditioning from toxic relationships & religious harm
- School trauma, isolation, and bullying
- Existential concerns and meaning-making
- Movement-based work with children
- Support for teens with behavioral or substance use issues