Rate: $95/ (53 min session). Lily is able to work on a flexible sliding scale if needed. Please contact us to learn more about working with one of our interns. At times, our intern program may have a waiting list.

Graduate Program: Masters of Social Work (MSW) student at Temple University

Areas of Interest: Somatic Work, Individuals Dealing with Shame, Anxiety, Depression, Parts Work, EMDR, Body and Soul Integration, Substances Use Recovery

Lily Brown (she/her) is currently a Masters of Social Work (MSW) student at Temple University.  She holds a Bachelors and Master of Fine Arts in Painting and is a certified yoga instructor. Lily has worked in a wide range of roles, from nannying to education, and brings a diverse and grounded perspective to her clinical work. She also has experience working with individuals in recovery from addiction, supporting them through both group and individual healing processes.

Her background as an artist informs her appreciation for nonlinear growth, emotional expression, and the creative process of transformation. Through her own experience, she has found that true healing can begin when we learn to regulate our nervous systems and return to a felt sense of safety in our own bodies. Together we can accomplish this by gently exploring our core wounds on a personal, intergenerational, and collective level in order to clear emotional blockages that keep us from living our fullest, most authentic life.

Clinical Approach

Lily approaches therapy as a sacred collaboration. She believes the therapeutic relationship can be a powerful container for transformation, where clients feel deeply seen, supported, and empowered. Her style is intuitive, warm, and grounded in the belief that embodiment and connection are key to healing.

Through a trauma-informed lens, her clinical orientation integrates parts work, EMDR, psychodynamic elements, and somatic tools to support mind, body and soul integration. Lily’s approach is also influenced by other non-western traditions she has engaged with on her own journey, including Eastern mind-body philosophies and Indigenous healing frameworks, which continue to inform her therapeutic practice. She is affirming of LGBTQIA+ identities and attuned to how identity, ancestry, and social context intersect within the therapeutic space. 

Having walked through many of my own life transitions, I understand healing not as a straight path but as a spiral. I encourage my clients to stay curious and compassionate toward themselves, trusting that even in the messiness, something meaningful is emerging.