Bryan Harrison, LMSW
Bryan Harrison (he/him) focuses on the exploration of one’s experiences of the world, and the meaning created based on these experiences. Bryan understands flexibility in treatment is crucial in building alliance toward a common goal, as therapy should be, at the very least, practical and functional in one’s life. Bryan works with adults and young adults, persons of any identification and intersection of identities.
Bryan’s work is trauma-informed, empowerment-based, client-centered, and infused with evolutionary and developmental psychobiology, including attachment theory and affect regulation, which exists in balance with phenomenological work via various therapeutic modalities on experiences of identity, self, others, and world: He works with clients experientially through dynamics of growth and empowerment to move toward their personal and interpersonal goals. Bryan operates on the premise that everything generated in the work is both intersubjective (of two minds) and part of the human experience, and that no part of one’s experience is valueless or meaningless, to be voided, nullified, or ignored.
Bryan received his MSW from New York University, with a background in palliative care, middle school social work, work with veterans with schizophrenia, major depressive disorders, and post-traumatic stress disorder.