Contact Me!

Use the form on the contact page and I'll get back to you as soon as I can. 

If this is an emergency, please call 911. 

3150 18th Street
Mission District, CA, 94110
United States

4155625411

Charis Khoury, MFT is a psychotherapist who supports individuals in the Bay Area with concerns such as depression, anxiety, shame, sexuality and life transitions. If you find yourself in unhealthy patterns that you don't understand, therapy can help. Contact me today and I'd be happy to chat. 

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Services

Charis Khoury, MFT works with individuals in San Francisco and Berkeley, who struggle with concerns such as depression, anxiety and panic, intimacy and sexuality, LGBT matters, and body image issues to name a few. If you'd like to make an appointment please contact me today. 

I work with individuals who struggle with issues such as: 

  • Self Esteem

  • Family Matters

  • Conflict and Communication

  • Relationship Distress

  • Depression

  • Anxiety and Panic

  • Intimacy and Sexuality

  • Life Transitions

  • Identity and Existential Matters

  • Climate anxiety/grief

  • LGBTQ Concerns

  • Addictions

  • Body Issues

  • Grief and Loss

  • Trauma


Speciality Services

I often get surprised looks when I tell people that I love working with shame.  Shame is an emotional state that can be quite hidden from awareness while nevertheless exerting a powerful influence on how we think, feel, convey ourselves, react and interact with others.  And while it has a certain social purpose, for most people, shame can become a significant roadblock to growth, to risk taking, to taking responsibility, and to deeply connecting with ourself and others.  The impulse to keep it hidden reinforces shame's insidious nature. In the compassionate container of therapy, and when ready, bringing shame to light can be immensely relieving and liberating as shame loses its force and begins to dissolve. 

Intimate relationships can be some of the most rewarding and challenging experiences of being human. We are wired for connection as biological necessity and yet, we are also wired to remember painful experiences to keep us out of danger. The difficulties that emerge in close relationships are often caused by wounds from early relationships. Through understanding your relational blueprints from early life, and experiencing them emotionally in a new way, there is an opportunity to rewire past experiences and unlearn tendencies that are blocking the genuine, open-hearted connection of which you are capable.

 

Your visions will become clear only when you can look into your own heart. Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakes.
— C.G. Jung