About this Blog

Kinding, n.
1. of exciting or inflaming the passions.
2. the process of refinement.
Kinding.org is about inspiring readers to explore a more balanced lifestyle.
Kinding.org is about living an integral lifestyle and doing things not from a place of deficiency but from feeling passionate about life, healing and humanity. Kinding.org also contains information about living foods, healing modalities, and other various items/products that manifest from the same kind of place. Kinding.org and the “KindingBlog” youtube channel were created in the hopes that people can feel inspired about living a more nurturing, balanced and sustainable life.
About Michelle
I am a NY & NJ State Licensed psychotherapist with a practice that includes a broad spectrum of clients of all ages and cultures at a NY outpatient psychotherapy clinic as well as in private practice. In addition, I have also practiced as a social work therapist at an inpatient residential facility for adolescents suffering from moderate to severe forms of trauma. I have two Masters degrees including in Social work and Kabbalistic Jewish studies and am currently an advanced standing PhD candidate in Psychology with a Transpersonal concentration.
My post-graduate training is in various therapeutic modalities including EMDR, NLP, Clinical Hypnotherapy, Breathwork, Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT), and Psychosomatic Psychotherapy which is a body-mind approach. I am also certified with the Lineage project to teach mindfulness based practices to adolescents. In addition, I have a certification in Living Foods Nutrition at the Body-Mind Institute, am a certified raw vegan chef, and have a Reiki Energy Healing levels I & II certification.
If you are looking to schedule an appointment for my psychotherapy, holistic health or energy healing services please feel free to email or call me at the contact information on the “contact” page or go to my other website: www.healingpsychotherapy.com for more information about my services.
“It is our greatest pain that may contain a deeper purpose. Therapist and patient enter into those places most feared for the purpose of healing through suffering, with the intent of actualizing wholeness.”