Grounded online therapy for spiritual awakening, mystical experiences, existential questions, and the process of integrating what has opened.
Spiritual experiences can be meaningful, disorienting, clarifying, destabilizing, beautiful, frightening, or difficult to explain. You may be moving through something that does not fit easily into ordinary clinical language — but also does not belong only in spiritual spaces.
Cameron Eshgh Therapy offers private-pay-forward online spiritual integration therapy for adults located in New York, New Jersey, Florida, Massachusetts, and Vermont. This work is clinically grounded, spiritually literate, relationally engaged, and depth-oriented.
A limited number of online spiritual integration therapy inquiries are reviewed for eligible clients in NY, NJ, FL, MA, and VT; insurance-based openings may require a waitlist.
Not every spiritual opening is easy to live through.
You may have had an experience that changed how you understand yourself, reality, meaning, death, consciousness, God, intuition, the body, or the life you thought you were living. You may feel more open, sensitive, intuitive, or awake — but also more anxious, overwhelmed, unmoored, or alone.
You may be asking: Am I having a spiritual awakening? Am I losing touch with reality? How do I integrate this without blowing up my life? How do I trust what I experienced without becoming ungrounded? How do I bring this into therapy without being dismissed? How do I stay connected to ordinary life while something deeper is changing?
Spiritual integration therapy offers a grounded space to explore these questions with care, discernment, and clinical steadiness.
Spiritual integration therapy may be a fit if you are navigating:
This work is not about forcing a spiritual interpretation onto your experience. It is about creating space to ask what is true, what is useful, what needs grounding, and what needs integration.
Spiritual experiences need careful holding. Some experiences may be spiritually meaningful. Some may be psychologically complex. Some may require stabilization, support, or a higher level of care. Often, they involve more than one layer at once.
Cameron's approach does not dismiss spiritual material, but it also does not romanticize destabilization. The work may include attention to:
Spiritual integration therapy should help you become more grounded, not more fragmented.
Spiritual integration is not separate from the rest of your life. A spiritual opening may touch your relationships, work, family history, creativity, sexuality, identity, grief, body, belief system, or sense of purpose. It may bring old wounds to the surface. It may challenge the strategies you used to rely on. It may reveal parts of you that have been hidden, exiled, or over-controlled.
Depth psychotherapy helps explore what the experience means in the full context of your life.
Not only: What happened? But also: What did it open? What did it unsettle? What part of you responded? What old pattern did it reveal? What new responsibility does it ask of you? What needs to be metabolized before it can become wisdom?
Many people who seek spiritual integration therapy are not looking for someone to tell them what their experience means. They are looking for a therapist who can remain steady while they sort through it.
You may be analytical, skeptical, intellectually rigorous, spiritually curious, or private about this part of your life. You may not identify as "spiritual," even though something has happened that you cannot easily ignore.
You may want a space where your experience can be taken seriously without being inflated.
Therapy with Cameron can help you stay close to reality while making room for mystery.
Spiritual integration is not about escaping pain, bypassing grief, avoiding relational repair, or turning every wound into a lesson. It is not about becoming more special, more awakened, or more detached from ordinary life.
Integration often means becoming more honest, more embodied, more relational, more accountable, and more capable of living what has been glimpsed. The work may include shadow, grief, fear, humility, repair, boundaries, and the slow translation of insight into daily life.
The goal is not to perform spirituality. The goal is to become more whole.
Cameron is licensed to provide online therapy to clients physically located in:
New York · New Jersey · Florida · Massachusetts · Vermont
This may be especially useful if you need continuity while moving between states, traveling seasonally, or splitting time between the Northeast and Florida.
Spiritual integration therapy may be a fit if you want therapy that can hold both psychological and spiritual complexity. It may be especially useful if you are seeking care that is:
A limited number of online spiritual integration therapy inquiries are reviewed for eligible clients in NY, NJ, FL, MA, and VT; insurance-based openings may require a waitlist.
Begin With an InquirySpiritual integration therapy is clinical psychotherapy that can include spiritual experience, identity, trauma, relationships, grief, and mental health. Spiritual direction or coaching may be better when the focus is guidance, practice, or goals outside clinical care.
A spiritual teacher may help with tradition, practice, or interpretation. A therapist may be important when the experience affects sleep, relationships, functioning, trauma, fear, identity, or emotional stability.
Spiritual integration helps a person metabolize spiritual experience in a grounded, embodied, relational way. Spiritual bypassing uses spiritual ideas to avoid grief, fear, trauma, accountability, or psychological work.
Yes. Cameron's approach makes room for mystical, intuitive, contemplative, psychedelic, religious, existential, and nonordinary experiences while remaining clinically grounded and discerning.
Ordinary uncertainty can be unsettling but manageable. A spiritual crisis may involve intense meaning, identity, or reality questions. A mental health crisis may involve safety risk, inability to function, psychosis, mania, or urgent distress and requires immediate support.
Online spiritual integration can work well for reflective, emotionally grounded therapy when you have privacy and stability. In-person or higher-level support may be better during acute crisis, severe destabilization, or when local containment is needed.
Clinician
NPI 1336731413.