Dr. Tanya Peters, Ph.D., is a psychologist in the Pacific Palisades who received her doctorate in Clinical Psychology from Columbia University, New York.
She completed her predoctoral fellowship at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles and postdoctoral fellowship in psychodynamic psychotherapy at the Wright Institute Los Angeles.
Dr. Peters is an expert in family dynamics and personal development. With over 20 years of education and experience, she helps individuals make the transformations they want for themselves by using a supportive and integrative approach that relies on psychodynamic, interpersonal, and cognitive-behavioral therapies.
She is particularly sensitive to understanding one’s ethnic, cultural, and spiritual background, ensuring a customized treatment for each individual.
Dr. Peters provides both in-person and Telehealth sessions via FaceTime, Skype, or Zoom, whichever is most convenient for you.
While Telehealth therapy presents some challenges, it can be highly effective, and far more convenient than in-person therapy. Just like in-person therapy, Telehealth benefits depend on your willingness to be an active participant, both in and outside of therapy sessions.
Why do people seek therapy?
What can I expect in a therapy session?
What benefits can I expect from working with a therapist?
What if I don’t know what my goals are for therapy?
Find Answers HereI view psychotherapy as a framework for identifying, understanding, and working through problems that cause people to feel stuck, helpless or insecure about their lives. Ultimately, I consider the goal of psychotherapy as empowering others to reach aspired levels of purpose, productivity, and fulfillment.
Through therapy, my clients gain a fuller understanding of themselves and the reasons behind recurring habits, upsetting moods and anxieties, relational conflicts, and obstacles that seem unsolvable. My clients explore alternative perspectives to their problems, make more informed choices around them, and gain a greater sense of control over their surroundings and the stressors they encounter.