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Headshot of Mary Robinson, LCSW
Mary Robinson
(she, her, hers)
Licensed Clinical Social Worker
New Mexico and New York

In-network with

Aetna, Carelon Behavioral Health, Cigna, and Quest Behavioral Health

Specializes in

Anxiety, Depression, Eating Disorders, and Relationship Issues

Great to meet you!

Mary Robinson is a New York State Licensed Clinical Social Worker with more than 25 years of experience helping adult individuals and couples transform problems into opportunities for growth and fulfillment.

A bit about my approach to therapy

Mary’s approach to therapy builds on client strengths and addresses the whole person – mind, body and spirit.

She is trained in a range of therapeutic models and relies on cognitive behavioral principles, solution-focused therapy, Gottman and EFT couples therapy, experiential methods, and mind-body practices for stress reduction, such as meditation, guided visualization, and breathing practices. She also is trained in and committed to supporting the well-being of LGBTQ+ individuals.

What you can expect from our first session

Mary believes her clients should feel empowered and affirmed, and that they have what they need to grow and meet the challenges they face.

To contact Mary, please send a message through Headway, she will respond within 24 hours.


Mary's style is

Affirming
Empowering
Warm

Insurance carriers Mary accepts

Aetna
Carelon Behavioral Health
Cigna
Quest Behavioral Health

More about Mary

MSW (Master of Social Work) at State University of New York, Albany
License type: LCSW (Licensed Clinical Social Worker) (New York, New Mexico)
Gender: Cisgender Female
Ethnicity: Caucasian
Languages: English
Works with: Adults and Seniors
More specialties: ADD/ADHD, LGBTQIA+, Stress, Women's Issues, Trauma, and PTSD
Modalities: Psychodynamic, Positive Psychology, Trauma Focused, Experiential Therapy, Brief Dynamic, Internal Family Systems (IFS), Gottman Method, Motivational Interviewing, Cognitive Behavioral (CBT), Strength-Based, Solution Focused Brief (SFBT), Mindfulness-Based (MBCT), Psychodynamic, Exposure Response Prevention, and Attachment-based