Kellie Klinck

Licensed Professional Counselor - Supervisor

I want therapy to feel like a real conversation. Therapy doesn’t have to involve lying on a couch telling me about your childhood. It means honest conversations, practical support, and room to figure things out.


  • I didn’t become a therapist because I had all the answers—I became one because I’ve lived through the questions. I know what it’s like to feel stuck, lost, or overwhelmed by change. I’ve had to navigate my own healing through the grief of infertility, relationship struggles, and those big life moments that crack things open and ask us to grow, ready or not.

    Over time, I found that the most powerful shifts happened when I felt truly seen—by people who were honest, real, and willing to meet me exactly where I was. That’s the kind of space I now aim to offer others. Therapy, to me, isn’t about “fixing” people—it’s about walking alongside you as you make sense of your experiences, reconnect with your strength, and learn to trust your own voice again.

    I bring both professional training and lived experience into the room, and I try to show up with warmth, honesty, and a deep respect for your story. It’s a privilege to support people through their most vulnerable moments—and to witness the real, lasting change that can happen when we give ourselves permission to grow.

  • I work best with 30+ clients focusing on deeper healing. I specialize in attachment therapy, interpersonal skill-building, family of origin trauma, sadness, loneliness, grief, and mid-life/existential challenges.

  • I primarily use a blend of Humanistic, Acceptance & Commitment (ACT) and Internal Family Systems (IFS) to support clients in reconnecting with themselves—with the parts that feel hurt, anxious, shut down, or protective, and the parts that long for more peace, connection, and meaning. I believe you are not broken—your symptoms are signals from parts of you that adapted to survive. In therapy, we get curious about those parts, not to push them away, but to help them feel understood and supported.