Embrace Your Full Humanity with Liberation-Focused Therapy

Keanu M. Jackson, LCSW wearing a tan headwrap, sitting on a chair with his arms crossed. The background features a wooden sideboard with a bottle, glassware, and bottles of alcohol, a mirror, some candles, and a vase with flowers.

What if therapy wasn’t just about managing pain, but about rediscovering your power, reclaiming your voice, and reconnecting with your truth? At Homebody Psychotherapy, liberation-focused therapy offers a space for queer, trans, and BIPOC individuals to heal in ways that honor their full humanity. Rooted in anti-oppressive, trauma-informed care, this approach recognizes that your struggles don’t exist in a vacuum—they’re shaped by systems like racism, homophobia, colonialism, transphobia, fatphobia, and capitalism.

Together, we name those systems, explore their impact, and begin to unlearn their grip. Therapy becomes a space not only to process harm, but to reimagine joy, rest, intimacy, and belonging on your own terms. This work invites you to move beyond survival and into something more expansive: embodiment, connection, self-trust, and liberation.

This is identity-affirming therapy that centers your culture, values, and lived experience. Each session offers a chance to reconnect with your body, your boundaries, and your desires without shame or apology. You deserve a life that feels like home—one rooted in freedom, wholeness, and care.

Here, healing isn’t about perfection—it’s about possibility. We move at your pace, guided by curiosity, consent, and care. Whether you're unpacking intergenerational trauma, navigating identity shifts, exploring your relationship to sex and intimacy, or simply yearning for more ease in your day-to-day life, this space is for you.

At Homebody Psychotherapy, liberation-focused therapy integrates parts work, narrative healing, and embodied self-inquiry to help you return to yourself with compassion. For queer and BIPOC folks especially, this isn’t just therapy—it’s a political and personal act of resistance. It’s a way to honor your softness, your rage, your sensuality, your grief, and your joy without explanation.

This approach is especially supportive for those who have felt unseen or harmed by traditional therapy models. Here, your fullness is not only welcome—it’s the foundation of the work. Whether you’re seeking virtual therapy in New York or Florida, or simply looking for a therapist who can hold the intersection of your identities with care, you’re invited to explore what healing could feel like when rooted in liberation.