Intentional, invested support for early-career clinicians.
For counselors growing into the vocation and art of therapy, this mentorship program is designed to do more than simply meet supervision requirements.
Develop your identity as a clinician, deepen your theoretical foundation, and cultivate the personal capacities graduate training often leaves untouched, through relational, growth-oriented mentorship designed to support both your practice and your sustainability in the work.
Many of the skills that make us effective therapists aren’t learned in graduate school.
Congratulations. You made it through school, internship, and into the real work of sitting with human beings in moments that matter. You’ve developed clinical knowledge, foundational skills, and the capacity to begin. That matters.
And somewhere along the way, many early-career clinicians begin to notice something else: Therapy is deeply personal work.
Being a strong therapist isn’t only about what we know. It’s also about our ability to remain present under pressure, regulate ourselves in complex relational moments, tolerate uncertainty, respond intentionally rather than reactively, and sustain genuine care over time. These are capacities we continue developing throughout our careers - and they deserve support, mentorship, and intentional practice.
My mentorship practice was created to help foster those capacities alongside your clinical growth.
Before becoming a therapist, my background was in lineage-based yoga practice and teaching, where mentorship, personal development, and relational presence were treated as essential foundations for holding space for others. Long before graduate school, I was engaged in practices designed to cultivate self-awareness, steadiness, discernment, and sustainable care.
Since 2020, I’ve integrated those foundations into my clinical work, supporting clients experiencing complex and high-acuity concerns while maintaining a practice rooted in presence, relational depth, and sustainability. This mentorship program grew from a desire to offer early-career clinicians the kind of support I believe this work genuinely requires.
It’s beautiful work. Hard work. Meaningful work. I’d be honored to support you in growing into it.
Curious?
Let’s have coffee and talk about what you’re hoping to grow in these first years of your career. Reach out any time at jessie@jessicahornesscounseling.com.
The Program
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Develop a clearer understanding of your personal theory of change and the clinical frameworks that genuinely resonate with you. Together, we’ll strengthen your theoretical grounding so you can work with greater intentionality, flexibility, and confidence in session.
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Therapeutic work asks something of us personally, not just professionally. Mentorship may include support around nervous system regulation, reflective capacity, self-awareness, relational presence, boundaries, sustainability, and developing the internal resources needed to engage this work skillfully over time.
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Strong therapists are not interchangeable. We’ll make space for questions of identity, ethics, style, values, and voice, supporting you in developing an approach to counseling that feels both clinically grounded and authentically your own.
This program is intentionally designed around ongoing mentorship and relational support, rather than a strictly hour-by-hour supervision model — while still fulfilling required licensure supervision hours.
For a flat monthly rate of $300, participants receive:
Up to two hours of individual supervision per month
One hour of group supervision monthly (when a cohort is available)
Access to emergent support during designated office hours
Access to a secure group chat space for questions, case consultation, and community support between meetings
Because this program is relationally oriented, mentorship will adapt in response to the needs, goals, and development of participating clinicians. Alongside supervision, our work together may include reading assignments, reflective exercises, and supported experiments with practices intended to deepen self-awareness, steadiness, and presence in the therapeutic relationship.