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      <image:title>Home - Hi, I’m Erin….</image:title>
      <image:caption>I am a trauma and attachment-focused therapist with over 15 years of experience helping women heal through life’s most difficult transitions. My work has spanned hospice, nonprofit leadership, and private practice, and has evolved to include experiential, nature-based, and animal-assisted approaches that honor the connection between mind, body, relationships, and the natural world. I completed a 500-hour advanced yoga teacher training and have integrated yoga and psychotherapy since 2010. My work is grounded in the belief that healing happens in relationship—with ourselves, with others, and with the world around us. I help women reconnect with their voices, deepen self-trust, and cultivate more authentic relationships. While the approaches I use are important, they are not the destination. The deeper work is helping you recognize what is no longer yours to carry, rebuild trust in yourself, and create a life that feels more aligned with who you are becoming. As a breast cancer thriver, my lived experience deeply informs my practice. I am especially passionate about supporting women navigating the emotional and psychological journey of survivorship, helping them process not only what happened, but also who they are becoming after treatment. Healing after cancer is about more than recovery—it is about rediscovering yourself, your voice, and the life you want to create moving forward. Outside the therapy room, you'll find me hiking, traveling, dancing, practicing yoga, or spending time with horses and my dogs. I believe nature has a remarkable way of helping us slow down, reconnect with what matters most, and remember who we are. My hope is to create a space where you feel supported, seen, and empowered to move toward a life that feels more authentic, grounded, and fully your own.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Services - Equine Assisted Psychotherapy (EAP)</image:title>
      <image:caption>I am trained in Equilateral EMDR, an equine specific model of EMDR, as well as Gestalt Equine Psychotherapy. In these modalities, clients work on regulation skills, communication and relational skills, and learning ways to soothe their nervous systems with the assistance and wisdom of horses.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Services - Rewilding Trauma Therapy</image:title>
      <image:caption>I focus on trauma informed and evidenced based therapy modalities (including EMDR and DBR) interwoven with nature based and animal assisted practices. Equine assisted EMDR, as well as nature based practices focused on healing trauma from the bottom up.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Services - Training and Consultation</image:title>
      <image:caption>I provide training and consultation, as well as group and individual supervision to clinicians wanting to incorporate more trauma informed animal assisted and nature based practices into their work. I work from an attachment, trauma, somatic, experiential Gestalt lens.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Services - Group Therapy</image:title>
      <image:caption>Group therapy can be a wonderful complement to individual therapy for people looking for support, connection, or basic skills related to communication. It can also be utilized as a stand alone therapy, and can often help with access if individual sessions are not realistic for you due to price or scheduling availability issues.</image:caption>
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    <lastmod>2026-03-20</lastmod>
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      <image:title>Reconstructed Book</image:title>
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    <lastmod>2026-03-25</lastmod>
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      <image:title>Trauma Therapy</image:title>
      <image:caption>What are earth based therapies? Earth-based therapy is rooted in a simple truth: we heal in connection—to ourselves, to others, and to the natural world. In our work together, we slow things down. We listen to the nervous system. We step out of urgency and into awareness. Sometimes that looks like being outside—working alongside horses, walking through open space, or simply sitting with the land and letting it hold what’s heavy. Sometimes it looks like being inside—cozy, grounded, with Buddy, my therapy dog, nearby. Most sessions weave in some element of the natural world, even in subtle ways. You might move between ranch and office sessions, or choose to stay indoors. There’s no one right way—just the way that supports your healing. I often “prescribe” time outside of session, too: walks, quiet moments under trees, connection with your animals, or small rituals of returning to yourself. At its core, my work is about practicing undomesticated therapy— rewilding evidence-based approaches by bringing them into relationship with nature, animals, and the body. It’s therapy that steps outside the box, outside the building, and back into something more instinctual, more grounded, more alive. And for those who prefer it, I do offer in-office sessions as well—just not telehealth. What is Undomesticated Therapy™? Undomesticated therapy takes in the long-view of who we are as human beings in client conceptualization. This is therapy that includes and goes beyond the intra- and interpersonal aspects of a client and considers the context of our ancient, undomesticated selves, one’s ecological identity and history, and the role cultural socialization has on a client’s authenticity.   Undomesticated therapy rewilds conventional therapy through many experiential paths and approaches such as: challenging societal conditioning and norms; reawakening instinct and intuition through somatic practices; partnering with animals and wildlife such as horses, donkeys, or birds; integrating herbology or plant medicine; hiking or walk-n-talks; and most importantly – actively collaborating with one’s local bioregion in interventions from a place of competence, relationship, and consideration of the client’s presenting concerns -Kimberly Rose, Colorado Ecotherapy Institute</image:caption>
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    <loc>https://www.rewildtherapy.com/speakingevents</loc>
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    <lastmod>2026-05-11</lastmod>
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      <image:title>Speaking Events</image:title>
      <image:caption>What are earth based therapies? Earth-based therapy is rooted in a simple truth: we heal in connection—to ourselves, to others, and to the natural world. In our work together, we slow things down. We listen to the nervous system. We step out of urgency and into awareness. Sometimes that looks like being outside—working alongside horses, walking through open space, or simply sitting with the land and letting it hold what’s heavy. Sometimes it looks like being inside—cozy, grounded, with Buddy, my therapy dog, nearby. Most sessions weave in some element of the natural world, even in subtle ways. You might move between ranch and office sessions, or choose to stay indoors. There’s no one right way—just the way that supports your healing. I often “prescribe” time outside of session, too: walks, quiet moments under trees, connection with your animals, or small rituals of returning to yourself. At its core, my work is about practicing undomesticated therapy— rewilding evidence-based approaches by bringing them into relationship with nature, animals, and the body. It’s therapy that steps outside the box, outside the building, and back into something more instinctual, more grounded, more alive. And for those who prefer it, I do offer in-office sessions as well—just not telehealth. What is Undomesticated Therapy™? Undomesticated therapy takes in the long-view of who we are as human beings in client conceptualization. This is therapy that includes and goes beyond the intra- and interpersonal aspects of a client and considers the context of our ancient, undomesticated selves, one’s ecological identity and history, and the role cultural socialization has on a client’s authenticity.   Undomesticated therapy rewilds conventional therapy through many experiential paths and approaches such as: challenging societal conditioning and norms; reawakening instinct and intuition through somatic practices; partnering with animals and wildlife such as horses, donkeys, or birds; integrating herbology or plant medicine; hiking or walk-n-talks; and most importantly – actively collaborating with one’s local bioregion in interventions from a place of competence, relationship, and consideration of the client’s presenting concerns -Kimberly Rose, Colorado Ecotherapy Institute</image:caption>
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