PMDD Therapy & Coaching
Psychotherapy for Premenstrual Disorders (PMDD & PME) locally in the Bay Area and virtually throughout the US.
You are Not Your PMDD Brain
Have you found yourself googling things like “PMS hell” or asking ChatGPT to help make sense of your symptoms? Have you gone down Reddit rabbit holes, trying to find language for an experience that feels hard to explain?
Does it feel like your doctor or OB-GYN doesn’t really know what to do with what you’re describing—or barely acknowledges it? Were you offered birth control or SSRIs as the only options? Have you felt like therapy hasn’t fully addressed the cyclical nature of what you’re experiencing?
Do the people closest to you—friends, partners, family—struggle to understand whats happening for you? Have you found yourself trying to explain it as “PMS on steroids,” just to convey how intense it can feel?
If you’ve landed on this page, you may already suspect that what you’re dealing with isn’t “just PMS.”
If any of this sounds familiar, you’re not alone. You’re not crazy, and you’re not your PMDD brain or emotions.
How I Can Help
I work with people who are exhausted from fighting their bodies and brains every month. PMDD can make you feel hijacked by your emotions—overwhelmed, reactive, ashamed, resentful, and completely unlike yourself. It can feel confusing, isolating, and deeply unfair.
My approach focuses on understanding your cycle, noticing patterns and triggers, and learning steady, reassuring things to say to yourself when symptoms intensify. I help clients develop clear, practical protocols to help you respond to emotional and physical shifts, rather than feeling blindsided by them each month.
Therapy won’t stop the hormonal shifts, but it can change how you move through them. I support clients in building awareness, self-compassion, nervous system support, and practical tools so these waves don’t feel quite as consuming—or so personal—each month.
Here’s what therapy can offer:
⟶ Understanding Your Cycle & Triggers:
PMDD isn’t just about timing—it’s about how stress, relationships, and old emotional patterns interact with hormonal shifts. I help you track how symptoms unfold over time and explore what’s being activated beneath the surface. Often, triggers point to deeper emotional needs or unresolved wounds that deserve care and attention, not judgment.
⟶ Emotional Processing & Nervous System Support:
PMDD can hijack the nervous system, making even small stressors feel urgent and overwhelming. I support clients in processing the unresolved, long-standing wounds beneath triggers and in identifying healing messages they can return to when emotions escalate. I use somatic techniques, mindfulness, polyvagal-informed strategies, IFS, and EMDR to help calm the body’s stress response and move out of survival mode more efficiently.
⟶ Learn Practical Coping Skills and Tools to Manage Dysregulation and Rumination:
I support clients in learning and building practical, personalized coping strategies that help regulate the nervous system, emotional patterns, negative thought patterns, and relationships—so symptoms feel more manageable instead of all-consuming. My work draws from CBT, DBT, IFS, Non-Violent Communication, Somatic Experiencing, meditation, yoga, EFT, and other somatic and energy-based approaches to offer a vast toolkit that can be used in real-life moments.
⟶ Supporting Relationships Impacted by PMDD:
PMDD doesn’t only affect you—it often impacts partners, family, and close relationships as well. This work supports clearer communication, stronger boundaries, and relational repair, so loved ones can better understand what’s happening without you carrying guilt, shame, or the pressure to explain yourself constantly. When appropriate, partners or family members may be invited into occasional sessions to learn supportive ways to respond, cope, and communicate needs more effectively.
⟶ Safety Protocols:
For those who experience suicidal thoughts or self-harm urges during PMDD, this work includes creating clear safety plans for moments when symptoms escalate toward crisis. These plans focus on practical steps, internal and external supports, and grounding strategies to help increase safety during the most intense periods.
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I am an associate licensed therapist in California and Washington and offer psychotherapy to residents of those states. Because specialized support for PMDD is often difficult to find, I also offer virtual coaching to individuals across the U.S. and internationally.
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I’ve completed specialized training focused specifically on PMDD and have experience supporting clients with PMDD. I also bring lived experience with PMDD, which informs my attunement to how disruptive and disorienting this condition can be.
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PMDD and PME go far beyond typical premenstrual changes. Symptoms can strongly affect mood, thinking, and relationships, often feeling intense, disruptive, or hard to control. What matters most is the pattern and severity: symptoms often emerge after ovulation, intensify in the days leading up to menstruation, and ease shortly after bleeding begins. When emotional or behavioral symptoms repeatedly interfere with daily life, work, or relationships each month, it may be worth exploring whether PMDD or PME is part of the picture.
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PMDD or PME can be diagnosed by a licensed therapist, primary care doctor, OB-GYN, or psychiatrist. Diagnosis is usually based on tracking symptoms across your menstrual cycle over time and looking at patterns, severity, and how much symptoms impact daily life.
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There’s no single treatment that works for everyone. PMDD and PME often respond best to a combination of approaches tailored to the individual.
Medication options may include SSRIs, birth control, hormone-based treatments, and in some cases antihistamines.
Holistic supports can include nutrition changes, supplements, regular movement, sleep regulation, and other body-based practices.
Therapy and nervous system support may involve approaches such as CBT, DBT, IFS, EMDR, mindfulness, and polyvagal-informed work.
Lifestyle adjustments like cycle tracking, stress reduction, self-compassion practices, yoga, meditation, diet, and exercise can also play a meaningful role.
The most effective treatment plan is often a thoughtful combination of these approaches, adjusted over time based on what actually helps.
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A formal diagnosis isn’t required to begin therapy. If PMDD is suspected based on symptoms, support can focus on tracking the cycle, identifying patterns, and building tools to manage symptoms more effectively. When helpful, I also support clients in advocating for medical evaluation and care. Many people struggle for years without a diagnosis—getting support sooner can make a meaningful difference.
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Yes. PMDD often affects relationships as much as it affects the individual. Therapy can support partners and family members in better understanding what’s happening, improving communication, and establishing boundaries that feel supportive rather than blaming.
When appropriate, partners or family members may be invited into occasional sessions for education about PMDD, practical coping strategies, communication skills, and nervous system regulation tools—so support feels more informed, grounded, and sustainable for everyone involved.
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I support people of all gender identities who experience PMDD and PME. I welcome trans and non-binary individuals struggling with premenstrual mood and emotional symptoms.
FAQS
What is PMDD?
Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a mental health condition in which the brain has an unusually intense response to the body’s normal hormonal shifts, most often during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle (the one to two weeks after ovulation and before menstruation). PMDD is not caused by a hormone imbalance. Research shows that hormone levels are typically within normal ranges, but the brain reacts differently to the rise and fall of estrogen and progesterone.
During this phase, symptoms can feel sudden, severe, and profoundly out of character. Common experiences include:
Intense irritability, anger, or emotional reactivity (often disproportionate to the situation)
Depression, hopelessness, or intrusive thoughts
Anxiety, panic, or feeling keyed up or on edge
Intense self-criticism, shame, or feelings of worthlessness
Feeling unlike yourself or feeling like a different person
Difficulty concentrating, mental fog, or slowed thinking
Sleep disruption, exhaustion, and physical tension
Symptoms tend to ease within a few days after menstruation begins, which helps distinguish PMDD from non-cyclical mood disorders, though patterns can change during perimenopause as hormonal fluctuations become less predictable. While some physical symptoms like bloating or breast tenderness may occur, PMDD does not cause heavy periods, severe cramps, or chronic period pain—its primary impact is on mood, emotional regulation, and mental health.
Why PMDD Can Feel So Overwhelming
PMDD can affect relationships, work, decision-making, and a person’s sense of self. Symptoms are hormone-triggered but often sudden and unpredictable, with mood shifts that can fluctuate across the luteal phase in ways that are unique to each individual.
PMDD can involve severe emotional distress, including suicidal thoughts or urges, particularly during the luteal phase, which is why informed and attentive mental health support is important.
PMDD symptoms can worsen during major reproductive transitions such as puberty, postpartum, perimenopause, and menopause. Understanding that PMDD is a biological sensitivity with real mental health effects—not a personal failing—can be an important step toward getting the right support.
You can learn more about PMDD through the The International Association for Premenstrual Disorders (IAPMD), a lifeline of support, information, and resources for those affected by Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) and Premenstrual Exacerbation (PME).
What is PME?
Premenstrual Exacerbation (PME) occurs when a pre-existing mental health condition—such as depression, anxiety, OCD, ADHD, PTSD, or bipolar disorder—worsens during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle (the one to two weeks after ovulation and before menstruation).
How PME Differs From PMDD
PMDD and PME can look very similar on the surface, and many people experience both. The key difference lies in timing and baseline symptoms:
PMDD: Symptoms are largely cyclical, emerging after ovulation and easing shortly after menstruation begins(though patterns may shift during perimenopause).
PME: Symptoms of an existing condition are always present, but worsen predictably during the luteal phase.
In other words, PMDD is a hormone-triggered condition in its own right, while PME reflects the hormonal amplification of something that is already there.
I offer virtual psychotherapy for residents of California and Washington, providing specialized support for PMDD and PME. Because knowledgeable care for these conditions can be difficult to find, I also offer virtual coaching to individuals throughout the United States and globally.
PMDD/PME Therapy in California and Washington and Coaching throughout the US
Therapy Approaches
✓ Internal Family Systems (IFS)
✓ CBT, DBT, and ACT
✓EMDR
✓ Brainspotting
✓ Hakomi/Somatic Psychotherapy
✓ Sensorimotor Psychotherapy
✓ Somatic Experiencing
✓Gestalt
✓ Emotionally Focused Therapy
✓ Attachment/Relational Therapy
✓ Non-Violent Communication Skills
✓ Drug/Alcohol Harm Reduction
✓ Mindfulness, Meditation Skills
Ready to Dive In ?
I offer a free 20-minute consultation to all clients so you can ask questions, learn more about my approach, and feel out whether we are a good fit.