All of You Therapy team laughing outdoors

You Hold the Depth.

We Hold It With You.

A practice built for therapists who won’t settle for surface.

Who We Are:

I tell myself a story about you… 

Your partner has, at some point, set down their fork full of Creamy Garlic Penne Pasta, sighed, and said, "Can we have one dinner where you don’t talk about attachment wounds?" You tried. You really did. You bite your tongue instead of firing back about the overwhelming scent of garlic on their breath—because, yes, your feelings are a little hurt—but you also know the Four Horsemen spell doom for relationships, and you need your partner around for the long haul. If the world keeps unraveling at this pace, you're going to need them to survive whatever fresh apocalypse comes next.

But then, at the next table, someone casually drops a reference to their emotionally unavailable mother. Now, despite your best efforts, you're half-listening to them while nodding at your partner, tracking the unconscious patterns in their story like it's an open case consult.

Your bookshelf isn’t just full—it’s a graveyard of heavily annotated pages and broken spines. You’ve got The Power of Attachment by Diane Poole Heller within arm’s reach at all times—not out of obligation, but because it speaks to something in you that never stops reaching for deeper understanding. You don’t just read about therapy; you metabolize it. You’ve tried reading something not related to trauma, but somehow, even the novels you pick up end up being about generational wounds. You have opinions—strong ones—about therapy models, and you can’t sit through a movie without clocking the protagonist’s attachment style before the first act break.

You’ve spent years going deeper, stretching yourself, sharpening your instincts. You’ve sat in your own therapy, confronting the raw grief of unmet childhood needs, the ways you learned to make yourself small, or the armor you built to survive. You’ve tracked how love felt conditional, how safety felt scarce, how connection meant performance—and how those experiences still echo in the therapy room.

You’ve stayed in therapy long after the crisis passed—because you know healing isn’t about symptom management; it’s about reshaping how you exist in relationships. You remember the rupture with your therapist—the moment they misattuned, and something deep inside you braced for disappointment. Every instinct told you to shrink, intellectualize, move past it. But you didn’t. You named it. You sat in the discomfort of repair, tracking how it echoed the wounds of being unseen, unheard, or too much. And in that moment, something actually shifted. That’s why you can hold a client’s pain—not just as an observer, but as someone who has walked through it. And yet, you keep looking around and wondering: Why does no one else seem to care this much?


If this is you, then you need..

Colleagues who don’t just talk about depth—they live it. They geek out over clinical dilemmas at lunch (behind closed office doors because #HIPAA), challenge your thinking, and make you a sharper, more attuned therapist.

  • A workplace where your growth isn’t a checkbox—it’s a given. Where your development is supported, expected, and woven into the culture.

  • Case consults that wake you up, stretch your thinking, and push you beyond easy answers.

  • The space to do the kind of therapy that fuels you. Where you leave sessions knowing you made an impact, not just checked a box. Where the work is deep, transformative, and aligned with why you became a therapist in the first place.

You’ve been holding the depth of this work on your own for too long. It’s time to be in a place where others carry it with you.

What we offer:

  • Trauma and attachment is an ever-evolving field, with new information and discovery each day. Our practice focuses on learning and applying the most up-to-date and current practices to support clients.

    That said, becoming a good, effective therapist is so much more than knowing a variety of modalities. We will support you in embodying trauma-informed and attachment-based practices so they can become the heart of your practice.

  • Our ideal team members are attachment and trauma specialists. Even within this, there is a wide variety of different specialties and approaches.

    Even as a trauma specialist, you’ll be unique among the team, invited to share your unique approach, work with populations you love, and practice your desired modalities.

    There is a synergetic overlap between you and your team members' knowledge, allowing you to go further in your clinical work than if you were going at it alone.

  • Katie Fries, Founder of All of You Therapy, is a seasoned therapist, experienced supervisor, sought-after speaker, and consultant for other group and solo private practice owners.

    She blends clinical wisdom, solid business sense, and compassionate leadership to offer a well-rounded work environment meant to nurture you personally and professionally.

    As a team member, you have access to her extensive experience with experiential, attachment-based therapies, as well as using a relational, emotion-focused lens to, IFS, AEDP, Play Therapy, Sand Tray Therapy, Family Therapy, Brainspotting, EMDR.

    As an entrepreneurial-minded group practice owner, she is dedicated to evolving and growing the practice to draw in ideal clients who will benefit the most from her team’s services.

    Learn more about Katie here.

  • Outdated tech or clucky processes only add extra stress, taking you away from the clinical work you love. You’ll know that you’re practicing under the highest legal and ethical standards, reducing your risk of liability and risk to your license.

  • After 10+ years in business, All of You Therapy’s resource library now includes thousands of hours of training, books, and resources, ranging from Polyvagal theory, ADHD resources, parenting support, Internal Family Systems (IFS), attachment-based therapy, tools for online therapy with children and teens, and more.

    You’ll be able to easily access whatever you need to research a difficult issue, enhance your skills, or ensure you’re using the correct protocols for your clients.

  • We understand the vulnerability it takes to be a trauma therapist – the feelings of imposter syndrome and that you don't know enough. Those feelings are welcomed and able to be talked about openly and met with co-regulation.

    We practice our trauma-informed, attachment-based values with each other, such as co-regulation, working towards a deeper sense of felt safety, and understanding the states of our nervous systems. In doing so, we can offer our clients an experience of their dysregulation being met by our (developed, worked on) nervous system states of regulation.

  • As a child therapist, you’ll be able to see clients in a play therapy room that had been carefully cultivated for 10+ years or a sand tray room with thousands of figurines. Your clinical work can expand when you work from a space that has practically everything you need to meaningfully engage your child clients.

All of You Therapy walking on the street and laughing, benefits of joining our team

✔ Paid Time Off 
✔ Resource Library of 100+ Clinical Trainings
✔ Administrative Support
✔ Annual Education Stipend
✔ Weekly Clinical Consultation
✔ Clinical Support As Needed 

✔ W-2 Status
✔ 25-hour Clinical Work Week
✔ Supervision Towards Licensure
✔ Private Pay Practice: Non-reliance on insurance
✔ Flexible Work Schedule
✔ Steady Client Referrals  

Our Benefits:

You didn’t dedicate yourself to the work to feel this alone.

The Reality Check:

The morning starts with yet another rushed intake—a client assigned to you with no real thought about fit. They say they need help setting boundaries, but you hear the echoes of early relational ruptures. You know a client’s treatment deserves more than checklists and quick interventions, but the system doesn’t leave room for anything else.

Supervision rolls around. You bring up a case that keeps you up at night, hoping for a discussion that challenges you. Instead, the feedback is vague, superficial—something about "trusting the process." You leave feeling like you’re holding the weight of this work alone. Again.

You head to the break room, hoping for some conversation that doesn’t skim the surface. You sit with colleagues, half-listening to weekend plans and small talk, waiting for someone to bring up a case that challenged them. It never happens. You bring up an interesting clinical moment from your morning session, but it lands with polite nods before the conversation shifts back to someone's latest home renovation project. You poke at your salad, feeling the weight of doing this work without a team that’s truly in it with you. You crave a team that dissects therapy like you do, but here? Most people are just counting down to the weekend.

By the end of the day, you’re drained—not from the deep, meaningful work you want to be doing, but from trying to squeeze good therapy into a system that doesn’t really prioritize it.

You didn’t sign up for this.

You’re not too much. You’re not expecting too much. You’re just in the wrong place.


The Before

  • You walk into consultation with a case that’s been keeping you up at night—something complex, layered, demanding deeper exploration. You’re ready to unpack the attachment wounds, implicit memories, and somatic markers revealing themselves in session. But the conversation stays surface-level. A few polite nods, a generic suggestion, and then… on to the next.

  • You crave supervision that doesn’t just gloss over your cases but helps you attune to the exact moment a client’s nervous system is signaling readiness for change. Instead, you get a half-distracted "You're doing great," with no real challenge or depth to push your thinking.

  • You sit in a room full of therapists, but no one is asking the deeper questions. No one is tracking how the nervous system is responding, how implicit memory is surfacing, or how the therapeutic relationship itself is the intervention. You wonder if anyone else notices what’s being left unsaid—if anyone else is frustrated by how much potential for change is being missed.

  • Your therapy space is functional but uninspired. You find yourself wishing for a sand tray, more art supplies, or even the right book to recommend to a client—but none of it is available. You improvise, but you know the work could go deeper with the right tools.

The After

  • You step into case consultation and feel the kind of mental spark you haven’t felt since that last training that actually changed the way you practice. The conversation isn’t just about interventions—it’s about what’s happening beneath the surface. A colleague picks up on a subtle theme in your case that shifts your entire perspective—something you hadn’t fully articulated yet, but now can’t unsee. Someone challenges your formulation in a way that forces you to rethink your approach. You leave feeling sharper, re-energized, and deeply engaged.

  • Supervision doesn’t just validate—it pushes you. You walk away with an intervention you hadn’t considered, a clearer understanding of your client’s emotional landscape, and a deeper awareness of how you show up in the room.

  • Your therapy space is fully equipped—art supplies, sand tray miniatures, therapy books—all readily available so you can focus on the work, not on what’s missing. And you’re not left scrambling to build a caseload from scratch. You’re stepping into a practice with a strong reputation, where referrals come because clients and clinicians trust the work we do.

Where Depth Is Expected, Growth Is Built In, and Clients Are Ready for the Work

Case Consultations That Push You – No surface-level check-ins. These are deep dives into what’s happening in the room—where you leave with sharper instincts and a clearer path forward.

Clients Who Are Ready for the Work – No symptom-chasing. No let’s just get through the session energy. Just clients committed to transformation, including parents working to break generational cycles.

A Practice That Invests in You – Your growth isn’t an afterthought here—it’s built into the culture. Consultation that actually challenges you. Advanced training that stretches you. Leadership that sees where you’re going and pushes you there.

A Caseload That Matches Your Strengths – You’re not just given clients to fill a schedule. You’re carefully matched to the work that aligns with your strengths—so your caseload fuels you, not drains you.

The Tools to Do the Work You Were Trained For – No scrambling. No improvising. Just a fully stocked therapy space with art supplies, sand tray miniatures, and neurobiologically informed resources—so you can go as deep as the work requires.

A Culture of Depth: This isn’t a practice where depth is a buzzword—it’s how we function. If you want a space where real transformation happens (for your clients and for you), this is where you belong.

All of You Therapy during a play therapy session, blowing bubbles

A practice built for therapists who give a damn

We know what it’s like to be the therapist who wants more—more depth, more challenge, more connection. That’s why this practice was built: for therapists who know that just because something is common doesn’t mean it’s acceptable. Who refuse to work in spaces that dull their instincts, limit their growth, or make them feel like they care too much.

At our practice:

  • Depth isn’t something you have to fight for—it’s the standard.

  • Growth isn’t optional—it’s expected, encouraged, and actively supported.

  • Leadership doesn’t just say they care—you feel it in every consult, every interaction, every decision made with your development in mind.

  • Your caseload is designed for meaningful work, not just to keep the schedule full.

  • High standards and a supportive environment aren’t trade-offs—they go hand in hand.

If you’ve been looking for a place where your depth is matched, where your hunger is met with challenge, where you are seen, valued, and pushed—this is it.


Meet Katie Fries
LCSW, RPT™, CCTP-II

Owner and founder of All of You Therapy, LLC

Meet the owner and founder Katie Fries

If you’re reading this, you’re likely looking for a place to do the kind of therapy you know matters. The kind that doesn’t just manage symptoms, but changes lives—starting with your own. That’s exactly why I built this practice.

I’m not interested in mediocre therapy or clinician burnout. I’ve built a team that’s sharp, self-aware, relationally driven, and truly committed to experiential healing. And I lead from the same place. I’ve done the trainings, walked the talk, and earned the kind of clinical reputation that means people come to this practice because they trust we can hold what others won’t.

I hold a high bar here—because deep, transformative work deserves a container that honors it. I’ve built a culture that truly invests in clinicians: meaningful mentorship, rich consultation, and a steady flow of clients who are genuinely ready for the work. This isn’t just a job—it’s a place where you’re allowed to be your full clinical self, to think deeply, feel fully, and grow in ways that are both professionally and personally meaningful. And that kind of space calls in clinicians who care deeply and show up with intention. That kind of environment deserves clinicians who are hungry to rise to it.

We don’t hire just anyone. This isn’t a place for therapists who are just looking for a job. We hire clinicians who live and breathe this work—not in a performative way, and not because they think it makes them better—but because they understand, in their bones, what it means to companion someone through the slow, sacred work of healing early wounds, rebuilding nervous system safety, and creating new relational templates from the inside out.

This work asks a lot. So we look for clinicians with the maturity, presence, and clinical depth to meet it. That doesn’t mean you’ve arrived at some final destination of expertise. It means you’re committed. You’re doing your work. And you’re hungry to keep growing.

If you’re craving a practice that meets your depth with equal depth—and you know in your bones that this work is sacred—I’d love to hear from you.

Let’s see if you’re a match for this kind of magic.

Are we a fit?

We are looking for clinicians who have demonstrated commitment to play therapy or attachment, trauma-focused therapies by having pursued training, certifications, or ongoing education in one or more of the following modalities:

  • We’re looking for clinicians who don’t just call themselves trauma-informed — they’ve lived into it. If you’ve pursued training or certification in any of the following, you’ll likely feel at home here:

    • Play Therapy (Theraplay, CCPT, etc.) & Sand Tray Therapy

    • EMDR

    • IFS

    • AEDP or other experiential modalities

    • Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) or Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy (DDP)

    • Psychodynamic, Sensorimotor, or Relational Therapy

    If you’re still building your training and aren’t quite there yet — no worries. We review applications on a rolling basis and would love to hear from you when you're ready.

How to Apply:

We hire on a rolling basis and are always open to connecting with clinicians who truly resonate with our mission. Even when we’re not actively hiring, we hold onto strong applications and reach out when the timing aligns.

This isn’t a generic clinical role, so please don’t send a generic application.
We want to know how you think, how you work, and how your training reflects your values. Be real, be specific, and let us see the clinician and the human behind the resume.

1

Send your resume and a thoughtful cover letter to katie@allofyoutherapy.net. Tell us what draws you to this work and why you feel aligned with our approach.

2

Complete this brief Google Form so we can get a better sense of your training, interests, and experience. Your application won’t be considered complete until it’s submitted.