Trauma happens in relationships. Healing does too.
With 20 years of experience, Dr. Katie Murray brings a combination of a deep well of knowledge and a relational style to her therapeutic work.
Dr. Katie Murray believes that healing happens within a supportive, authentic relationship that creates space for repair. Her practice as a clinical psychologist is grounded in the field of interpersonal neurobiology and she specializes in the treatment of trauma, attachment wounds, mood disorders and eating disorders with adult clients. Personally and professionally, she works to embody the beliefs that boundaries and direct communication are kind.
Katie’s training includes EMDR, Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Levels I & II (a body-based psychotherapy). She has specific experience working with clients who have a background in Christianity and enjoys working with people exploring the impact on their faith systems as they expand into their truest selves. She believes that each of us possesses the wisdom we need, we just sometimes need help creating the container to access it. Katie’s hope is that her clients feel empowered to draw on and grow into their inherent worth through their work together.
Katie acknowledges that her practice is based in the homeland of the Dakota people. Her work as a clinical psychologist strives to align with her belief in the importance of social justice and a personal and professional commitment to the on-going work of anti-racism. As a cis-gendered, White bodied person, she acknowledges that she enters this work from an unearned place of privilege and believes in the importance of that awareness in the therapeutic relationship. She also enjoys working with other White bodied people who are seeking support in their process of dismantling internalized racism. She is a firm ally to the LGBTQIA+ community.
In addition to individual and couple’s work, Katie has a passion for the healing power of therapeutic groups and has experience in group work at a range of levels of support. She also has the honor of supporting developing therapists on their path towards licensure as a clinical supervisor and truly loves that aspect of her practice.

