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About Me.

My work within clinical and community settings emphasises understanding the interactions between personal experiences and environmental, sociopolitical factors. I am committed to learning, unlearning and fostering an atmosphere of dignity and respect for all.

My therapeutic practice spans schools, and community-based spaces, working with individuals, partners, and families, particularly those navigating systemic marginalisation. As a queer, autistic person with partial visual impairment and chronic illness (endometriosis), I draw deeply from lived experience. I live in Delhi as an upper-caste individual, and I remain committed to the ongoing work of unlearning and accountability.

My embodiment informs how I hold space—through slowness, consent, and attunement. My practice is grounded in feminist, anti-caste, and anti-colonial frameworks, rooted in relational ethics and accessibility. I prioritise systemic understandings over individual pathologisation, and use multiple modes of communication including written, spoken, image-based, and non-verbal approaches.I integrate trauma-focused somatic and arts-based methods, psychodynamic thinking, and collaborative meaning-making in therapy.

In addition to my clinical practice, I lead a behavioral risk analysis and crisis response program within a multinational technology company, where I support trauma-informed policy and care strategy development across teams including legal, safety, and operations.


As a facilitator and educator, I’ve led trainings, lectures, and reflective spaces on topics such as trauma-informed care, neurodivergence, allyship, and inclusion for a wide range of institutions—corporate, governmental, and community-based. My work in these contexts focuses on fostering systemic safety, grounded in experiential learning and feminist/ disability justice principles.As a researcher, I’ve conducted ethnographic and participatory work in shelter homes, schools, clinics, and street-based communities, with a focus on the embodied politics of belonging, and how care is structured (or denied) within institutional life.My current projects include developing trauma-informed support systems for mental health, legal and social-work professionals, building reflective practice spaces, and collaborating on survivor-centric justice frameworks for criminal defence. Across all my work, I am dedicated to building accountable, liberatory, and radically accessible systems of care within and beyond the clinic.

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