You know who you
are expected to be.

You’re not sure who you are.

Attachment-based therapy for South Asian women across Texas, navigating identity, relational wounds, and disconnection from self.

Here, you don’t have to know who you are yet.
You only have to be willing to begin.

Who This Space is For

From the outside, your life may look fine. Internally, you feel disconnected from yourself, emotionally exhausted, or unsure who you are beneath the roles, expectations, and versions of yourself you’ve learned to become.

"It feels easier to disappoint yourself than risk disappointing someone else."

You might recognize yourself in this

  • carrying a quiet feeling that you're somehow not enough

  • saying yes when you want to say no, then feeling exhausted or resentful

  • chasing connection in relationships where you don't feel fully chosen

  • second-guessing your needs, decisions, or direction in life

  • feeling like your inner world and the life you're living no longer match

Two women having a conversation on a park bench with a grassy area, trees, and a pond in the background during late afternoon or early evening.

Services

Many clients move between these approaches as the work unfolds.
They are not separate paths, but different entry points into the same deeper process of reconnecting with yourself.

Not sure where you fit? We can explore that together.

How the Work Unfolds

What to expect from trauma therapy,
from consultation through the deeper work.

Most people want to know what they’re walking into before they begin. While every client’s process looks different, these are the phases many clients move through over time.

A woman in a white dress walking along a dirt path in a dense forest with tall trees and green foliage.

Heart of the Work

“You were never meant to leave yourself behind in order to belong.”

Many people learn early that belonging comes from becoming who other people need them to be. You learn to read the room, manage other people's emotions, avoid disappointment, and hide the parts of yourself that don't feel welcome. Over time, what once helped you stay connected can leave you disconnected from your own needs, emotions, and sense of self. To me, healing is not about becoming a different person. It is about creating enough safety to reconnect with the parts of yourself that got left behind along the way. Therapy becomes a space where you no longer have to choose between being yourself and staying connected to others.

A woman smiling outdoors next to trees, wearing a sleeveless cream-colored top and brown pants.

MEET YOUR THERAPIST

Maryam Munis, MS, LPC

Founder & Lead Therapist

This work had to become deeply personal before it could ever become professional for me.

Like many of the women I work with now, I know what it feels like to lose yourself while trying to belong. To shape yourself around what feels safest or most needed until you are no longer sure which parts of you feel real anymore. To carry different versions of yourself between home, culture, relationships, and who you are trying to become. To keep searching for something outside yourself without fully realizing how deeply you are longing for yourself underneath it all.

In many ways, the reasons I became a therapist were the exact reasons I eventually needed therapy, too. I believe deeply that I cannot walk someone somewhere I have not been myself or am not willing to go alongside them. My own journey of making sense of myself and learning how to return to who I am continues to shape the way I sit with people today and why this work matters so deeply to me.

Texas-licensed · EMDR-trained · attachment-focused, somatic, and culturally responsive practice

Fees and Insurance

Clear expectations and logistics are part of starting therapy well. Here’s what to know.

If any part of this feels confusing or overwhelming,
we can talk through it together during a consultation call.

Common Questions

Let's evolve. 

You only have to be willing to begin.