Maggie earned her Master’s Degree in Social Work with a specialization in Clinical Therapy with Children and Families at Loyola University Chicago. Maggie has worked with adults, adolescents, families, and couples in a variety of neurorehabilitation, community-based, school, residential, and private practice settings. With specialties in areas such as trauma, attachment, relationships, anxiety, depression, traumatic injury, chronic pain, grief and loss, and life transitions, Maggie seeks to cultivate comfort and connection where folks feel empowered and safe to explore the layers of their being.

Throughout her clinical work, Maggie has become increasingly more passionate about the mind-body connection and supporting folks impacted by injury, chronic pain, and associated trauma in accessing their resilience and deepening connection to self and others. Maggie believes that through rooting more deeply in mind and body and emphasizing nervous system regulation, with curiosity on board, we can cultivate a fuller sense of grounding, safety, and wellbeing.

Maggie approaches her work from a trauma-informed, strengths-based and client-centered lens, integrating various somatic and embodied practices with cognitive techniques. She strives to create a non-judgmental space that fosters belonging, recognizes strengths, and values individual needs and experiences.

Maggie works with adolescents ages 14+