Therapy for Young Men in Albany, NY
I have worked with many young men — in their twenties and thirties — who are struggling with relationships, compulsive behavior, a sense of meaninglessness, or a feeling of being stuck in patterns they cannot seem to change. I take these concerns seriously on their own terms.
Young men in therapy: what I have seen
I have observed a pattern of younger men today feeling guilty and responsible for issues they are not in control of, while simultaneously being genuinely unaware of the ways their own patterns contribute to the problems they experience. Both things are often true at once. Untangling them requires honest, direct conversation — and a therapist who will neither take sides nor avoid the real questions.
Young men often come to therapy carrying a specific combination of concerns: a relationship that is not working and a difficulty understanding exactly why; compulsive behavior — pornography, substances, romantic obsession — that they know is a problem but have not been able to stop; and a deeper sense that they are not living the life they want, without clarity on what they actually do want.
In addition to being a clinical social worker, I have a PhD in philosophy. That background gives me a particular way of approaching the deeper questions — about meaning, identity, and how to live — that often underlie the presenting concerns young men bring to therapy.
What young men most commonly bring to therapy
Relationship Difficulties
Communication breakdown, feeling trapped or unheard, patterns that repeat across relationships, and the specific confusion that comes from not knowing whether a relationship is genuinely worth fighting for or whether it is time to move on with clarity and integrity.
Pornography and Compulsive Behavior
Compulsive pornography use is one of the most common concerns young men bring to therapy and one of the most rarely spoken about directly. I approach it without judgment and with a clear-eyed understanding of what drives it and how to change it.
Substance Use
Alcohol and drug use that has moved from recreational to compulsive, or that a man himself suspects is becoming a problem even before others have noticed. I work with both 12-Step frameworks and rational, CBT-based approaches depending on what fits.
Meaning and Identity
A vague sense that something is wrong without being able to name it. A feeling of going through motions. Questions about who you actually are, what you actually want, and what kind of life is worth living. These are not trivial concerns. They deserve serious attention.
Gay Identity and Coming Out
Young gay men navigating identity, relationships, family dynamics, and the pressures of LGBTQ+ life. Coming out is not a single event but an ongoing process, and every person’s experience of it is different.
Family of Origin
Patterns carried forward from childhood — from homes where addiction, emotional unavailability, or dysfunction shaped who you became. Recognizing these patterns in yourself is not about blame. It is about understanding what you are actually working with.
What working with me actually looks like
I am direct. I ask specific questions. I do not avoid the real issues. I am also genuinely interested in what a person is experiencing and why, and I bring both clinical training and a philosophical education to that curiosity.
My approach is not one-size-fits-all. Some clients benefit from a more structured, CBT-based framework — identifying specific patterns of thinking and behavior and working to change them. Others benefit more from a slower, more exploratory approach — understanding where their patterns came from, what function they have served, and what a more authentic version of their life might actually look like.
What I have found consistently is that young men who come to therapy with genuine willingness — who are honest about what they are experiencing, even when it is uncomfortable — make real progress. The work is not easy. But it is worth doing, and most people know it is worth doing before they make the first call.
Questions about therapy for young men in Albany, NY
In my experience, young men in their twenties and thirties most often come to therapy struggling with relationship difficulties, compulsive behavior including pornography or substance use, a sense that their life lacks direction or meaning, questions about identity, and a feeling of being stuck — knowing something needs to change but not knowing how to change it.
Yes. Some of the most productive therapy happens with people who are functioning reasonably well but feel that something is off. A vague sense that you are not living the life you want, or that your relationships are not what they could be — these are real concerns that deserve serious attention.
Yes. Compulsive pornography use and substance use are among the most common concerns young men bring to therapy, often alongside relationship difficulties and a sense of meaninglessness. I work with these issues both individually and in the context of the broader patterns driving them.
Young men today navigate a particular set of pressures around masculinity, relationships, sexuality, purpose, and identity that are worth taking seriously on their own terms. I have worked with many men in their twenties and thirties who feel they are being treated poorly in relationships but also feel guilty or responsible for things outside their control. Untangling that specific confusion is significant work.
Yes. I offer telehealth video sessions for clients across New York and New Jersey, in addition to in-person sessions at my Albany, NY office. Many young men find telehealth easier to access and more comfortable as a starting point.
You already know something needs to change.
Most men who reach out have known for a while that they wanted to. The first conversation is just that — a conversation. I respond within one business day. No pressure.
This line does not accept texts.
I usually respond within one day.
Telehealth available across NY and NJ
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Ready to have an honest conversation?
I usually respond within one business day. No pressure — just a straight talk.