Co-Founder
Mahsa Chadorchi, LMFT
Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist
Therapy for individuals, couples, and families seeking deeper connection, emotional clarity, and healthier patterns in the relationships that matter most.
When relationships no longer feel like a place to rest
Many of the people I work with are carrying emotional strain that is difficult to explain from the outside.
They may be managing responsibilities, relationships, parenting, work, family expectations, or major life transitions — while privately feeling overwhelmed, disconnected, resentful, anxious, or unsure how to ask for what they need.
For some, the pain shows up in communication that keeps breaking down. For others, it appears as emotional distance, conflict, self-doubt, people-pleasing, exhaustion, or the quiet feeling of having lost touch with themselves.
My role is to help you slow down, understand the patterns underneath the distress, and begin creating more honest, connected, and meaningful ways of relating to yourself and the people in your life.
Co-Founder
Mahsa Chadorchi, LMFT
Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist
Therapy for individuals, couples, and families seeking deeper connection, emotional clarity, and healthier patterns in the relationships that matter most.
When relationships no longer feel like a place to rest
Many of the people I work with are carrying emotional strain that is difficult to explain from the outside.
They may be managing responsibilities, relationships, parenting, work, family expectations, or major life transitions — while privately feeling overwhelmed, disconnected, resentful, anxious, or unsure how to ask for what they need.
For some, the pain shows up in communication that keeps breaking down. For others, it appears as emotional distance, conflict, self-doubt, people-pleasing, exhaustion, or the quiet feeling of having lost touch with themselves.
My role is to help you slow down, understand the patterns underneath the distress, and begin creating more honest, connected, and meaningful ways of relating to yourself and the people in your life.
“Healing begins when you feel safe enough to understand yourself honestly and kindly.”
Therapy is not about blaming yourself, your partner, your family, or your past. It is about creating enough clarity and emotional safety to understand what has been happening, why certain patterns keep repeating, and how change can begin.
Insight, connection, and practical change
My approach is warm, collaborative, and grounded in the belief that meaningful change happens through both understanding and action.
I draw from psychodynamic therapy to help clients explore the deeper emotional patterns, relationship dynamics, family experiences, and internal beliefs that shape how they move through the world.
I also integrate cognitive behavioral tools to help clients develop practical strategies for managing anxiety, improving communication, regulating emotions, challenging unhelpful thoughts, and responding to difficult moments with more intention.
Therapy should feel supportive, but it should also feel useful. My goal is to help you better understand yourself while also building real tools for the life and relationships you are trying to create.
A strong fit for people seeking more connected relationships
I work with individuals, couples, and families who are ready to better understand the emotional and relational patterns that have been causing pain, distance, or disconnection.
You may be a strong fit for my approach if you are experiencing:
- Relationship conflict or emotional distance
- Communication patterns that keep breaking down
- Anxiety, stress, or emotional overwhelm
- Parenting stress or family tension
- Difficulty expressing needs, boundaries, or vulnerability
- Life transitions, identity shifts, or changes in family roles
- People-pleasing, resentment, or self-doubt
- Trauma, painful family dynamics, or unresolved emotional wounds
- A desire to feel more connected to yourself and the people you love
My style is compassionate, engaged, and honest. I help clients look beneath the surface of what is happening, understand the patterns that keep repeating, and begin making changes that feel healthier, more sustainable, and more aligned.
This is not about quick advice or generic coping skills. It is about developing a more honest relationship with yourself and creating more meaningful ways of connecting with others.
Clinical depth shaped by complex human experiences
My clinical background has given me the opportunity to work with people across a wide range of emotional, relational, and psychological experiences.
For over a decade, I have worked in a correctional mental health setting, supporting individuals facing acute distress, trauma histories, emotional volatility, crisis, and significant life challenges.
This work has shaped my ability to remain calm in difficult moments, listen without judgment, support emotional regulation, and understand the many ways people adapt when they have been hurt, overwhelmed, or disconnected from support.
Alongside this work, I have also developed a private practice focused on helping individuals, couples, and families create meaningful change in their daily lives and relationships.
Whether someone is navigating a painful relationship pattern, parenting stress, anxiety, trauma, or a major life transition, I bring clinical steadiness, compassion, and respect for the complexity of each person’s story.
Therapy should feel safe, grounded, and real
I believe effective therapy begins with trust.
People need a space where they can feel seen, heard, and supported — but also gently challenged to understand themselves more honestly. My work is rooted in warmth, emotional safety, and authentic human connection.
I pay attention to the patterns beneath the surface: the ways people protect themselves, the roles they learned to play in relationships, the feelings that become difficult to express, and the needs that may have gone unmet for a long time.
Therapy is not about becoming someone else. It is about returning to yourself with more compassion, clarity, and choice.
When we understand ourselves more deeply, we create more room for connection, healing, boundaries, communication, and meaningful change.
A thoughtful beginning
The first session is a place to begin understanding what has been feeling difficult, painful, disconnected, or unresolved.
We will talk about what brings you to therapy, what has been happening in your life or relationships, and what you are hoping will feel different. You do not need to have everything perfectly organized before you begin.
Part of the work is helping make sense of what has felt confusing, heavy, or hard to name.
From there, we begin building a thoughtful and collaborative path forward.
Degrees & Licenses
A summary of professional licensure, clinical training, and academic credentials.
Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist
California Board of Behavioral Sciences · License #52564
Master of Arts
Marriage and Family Therapy / Psychology · Argosy University
Bachelor of Arts
Psychology · California State University, Northridge
Begin with a Consultation
You do not have to wait until things fall apart to begin therapy. Sometimes the right time to start is when you realize that functioning is no longer the same as feeling well.
If something on this page feels familiar, I invite you to schedule a consultation. We will talk briefly about what you are looking for, what you are hoping to change, and whether working together feels like the right fit.


