Professional psychotherapy tailored to you and the life you’re living.

Starting therapy is a big decision that takes guts and we get that. Our therapists take the time to learn what’s been weighing on you and what you hope to get out of sessions. The goal is to help you understand yourself well enough that the changes you make in therapy stick long after you stop coming.

Psychotherapy in New York

Our therapists are trained across multiple evidence-based modalities, and they use that range to build a treatment approach that fits the way you think and process the world around you.

Therapy at Inspire is an active, ongoing conversation. Your clinician will check in with you regularly about what’s working and where you want to focus next. Our work together evolves as you do.

What is Psychotherapy?

Psychotherapy is a clinical process where you work with a licensed therapist to understand the patterns and emotions that are driving the difficulties in your life. It goes deeper than just talking about your problems. Your therapist uses specific, evidence-based techniques chosen to match your situation and your goals, and together you build the insight and skills needed to create lasting change.

At Inspire, our clinicians draw from modalities like CBT, DBT, psychodynamic therapy, EMDR and others depending on what your situation calls for. Some of these are more structured and skills-based. Others focus on uncovering the deeper roots of what you’re experiencing. Your therapist will often blend approaches across sessions based on what’s coming up for you and how your treatment is progressing.

Your feedback steers the process. Our therapists ask honest questions about whether the approach is clicking and what needs to change. That kind of ongoing dialogue means your treatment stays responsive to where you are right now rather than following a rigid plan from a textbook.

What to Expect From Psychotherapy at Inspire

In the first session your therapist will want to understand what brought you in and what you’ve already tried, including whether you’ve done therapy before and how that went. There’s no pressure to share everything at once and this first session is just to get to know each other better. Most people need a few sessions before they feel comfortable enough to go deeper, and your therapist expects that and won’t rush you. You’ll leave with a sense of how your clinician works and whether the fit feels right.

Over the next few sessions, your therapist will start shaping a treatment approach based on what they’re learning about you. That might mean introducing specific techniques right away if your situation calls for it, or it might mean spending more time building a foundation first. Either way, you’ll know what the plan is and why. Our clinicians explain their reasoning so you’re never left wondering what the point of an exercise is or where the work is headed.

Sessions are typically weekly, especially at the beginning when you and your therapist are still building momentum. As things progress, some people move to biweekly sessions. Your clinician will talk openly with you about pacing and adjust the frequency based on how things are going rather than defaulting to a fixed schedule.

If you’re also working with a prescriber at Inspire, your therapist and prescribing clinician coordinate behind the scenes. They share relevant updates with your permission, so that your medication and therapy are working in the same direction. You get one cohesive treatment experience without having to be the go-between.

How Therapy and Medication Work Together

Some people come to Inspire for therapy alone. Others are already seeing one of our prescribers and want to add therapy to their treatment. Both paths work, but when therapy and medication run side by side, the combination often produces results that neither achieves on its own.

Medication can reduce the intensity of symptoms enough that therapy becomes more productive.

When your brain is working against you at a biological level, it’s hard to absorb new ways of thinking or sit with uncomfortable emotions long enough to process them. The right medication can lower that interference so the work you’re doing in sessions has somewhere to land.

Therapy, in turn, gives you tools that medication doesn’t provide.

Medication can stabilize your symptoms, but the deeper work of understanding why you respond to the world the way you do, and learning how to change those patterns, happens in the room with your therapist. That’s what creates progress that holds up long after treatment ends.

At Inspire, the coordination between medication management and psychotherapy happens without you having to manage it. Your therapist and prescriber share observations in real time, so adjustments on either side happen faster and with full context. You get one treatment that accounts for the whole picture rather than two separate plans running in parallel.

How to Get Started

In one quick call, we can verify your insurance and schedule an appointment.
Appointments can be scheduled as soon as the next business day.

Reach Out

Reach Out

Give us a call or fill out our contact form. We’ll ask a few questions about what you’re looking for and whether you want therapy only or coordinated care with a prescriber.

Check and Connect

Get Matched

Based on that conversation, we’ll pair you with a therapist whose expertise and style fit your situation. We want the match to feel right from session one.

Feel Better

Begin Therapy

Your first session is all about getting to know each other. Your therapist will want to understand what brought you in and what you’re hoping to get out of the process. From there, your treatment plan takes shape around you.