
Tressi Albee MA, MA, LPC, RYT 500
is a licensed psychotherapist with an emphasis in Depth Psychology, practicing remotely and in person in Southern Oregon. Tressi earned an undergraduate degree in Religious Studies from University of California at Santa Barbara where she studied her senior year in Kenya. She continued her formal education after having her children and building her home on a quiet creek in Southern Oregon.
Returning to Santa Barbara to study at Pacifica Graduate Institute, Tressi earned two Masters degrees, one in Counseling Psychology with an emphasis in Depth Psychology, and a second masters degree in Depth Psychology with an emphasis in Community, Liberation, Indigenous, and Eco-Psychologies. Tressi did her internships at a local birth center and at Zen Hospice Project in San Francisco, California. She holds specialties in Prenatal/Perinatal Psychology, End of Life Psychology, Yoga therapy, and she is training in psychedelic-assisted therapies. Tressi continued her education in Yoga Studies with 500 hour Yoga Teacher Training, and Yoga Therapy training.
Tressi lives rurally in the strawbale home she built with her family in Southern Oregon where she practices depth psychotherapy and yoga therapy, writes, gardens, dances, practices yoga, paddleboards, and surfs.
BA in Religious Studies from the University of California at Santa Barbara (1992)
MA in Counseling Psychology with an emphasis in Depth Psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute (2014)
MA in Depth Psychology with an emphasis in Community, Liberation, Indigenous, and Ecopsychologies (2017)
Yoga Teacher Certifications: (Registered Yoga Teacher at 500 hour) RYT 500
Yoga Therapy 800-hour program in process
Psychedelic assisted therapy training in process
Mothering for 30 years.
Grandmothering for 5 years
“The single most important issue for traumatized people is to find a sense of safety in their own bodies.”

IN BLACKWATER WOODS
(Excerpt from Mary Oliver’s In Blackwater Woods)
To live in this world
you must be able
to do three things:
to love what is mortal;
to hold it
against your bones knowing
your own life depends on it;
and, when the time comes to let it go,
to let it go.