
See Theresa's Details for:
Theresa Kimm, LCSW, is a New York-based Korean-American therapist with nearly 15 years of experience helping high-functioning adults bridge the gap between how capable they appear and how depleted, stuck, or disconnected they feel on the inside. Her clients are often ambitious, self-aware people who have built successful lives by working hard and holding it together, but still find themselves struggling in ways that standard advice, willpower, or productivity strategies haven't been able to touch.
Theresa has a particular focus on first-generation adults, professionals in high-pressure fields, and individuals navigating the emotional weight of chronic overachievement, people-pleasing, or survival-mode functioning. She works with adults facing anxiety, burnout, perfectionism, low self esteem, relationship difficulties, trauma, and problematic substance use — often with multiple threads woven together rather than a single presenting concern.
Her approach is relational, insight-oriented, and collaborative. Theresa integrates psychodynamic and attachment-focused therapy with CBT and trauma-informed practice, helping clients understand the deeper patterns, early experiences, and internal narratives driving their current struggles — while also building practical skills for managing anxiety, emotional reactivity, and self-defeating cycles in daily life. The goal is not just symptom relief but lasting change in how clients relate to themselves and others.
As a Korean American and first-generation immigrant, Theresa brings personal and clinical insight into the pressures of identity, cultural expectation, and achievement — experiences that are often central but unspoken in the therapy room. She creates a space that is direct and engaged without being prescriptive, and clients frequently describe her as someone who helps them see themselves more clearly without judgment.
Theresa offers teletherapy for adults and is licensed in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Colorado.
Years of Experience: 15 years
Depression - Depression often develops gradually after significant stress, loss, burnout, or long periods of functioning in survival mode. Many high-functioning individuals continue meeting responsibilities while privately struggling with hopelessness, self-criticism, emptiness, irritability, or emotional disconnection. Depression is not always obvious from the outside and often reflects deeper emotional patterns, unresolved pain, or ways of coping that no longer serve you.
Substance use - Substance use often begins as a way to manage stress, anxiety, loneliness, emotional pain, or the pressure of constantly functioning at a high level. Over time, alcohol or cannabis can shift from something recreational into a coping strategy used to numb, escape, self-soothe, or simply get through the day. Many high-functioning individuals struggle privately with this pattern while continuing to maintain careers, relationships, and responsibilities on the surface.
Trauma - Trauma can leave lasting effects long after the original experience has ended. Childhood neglect, abuse, unstable relationships, or overwhelming life events can shape self-worth, relationships, anxiety, and the nervous system. Many people cope by over-functioning, shutting down emotionally, people-pleasing, or staying in survival mode without fully realizing how much unresolved experiences continue to impact daily life.
Burnout - Many high-achieving professionals don’t immediately recognize that feelings of apathy, dissatisfaction, anxiety, or hopelessness may be tied to chronic over-functioning and an unsustainable relationship to work, achievement, and external validation. These patterns are often reinforced by family expectations, cultural pressures, and environments that reward productivity while disconnecting people from their emotional needs and sense of self.
Asian American Issues - Many Asian American and first-generation individuals struggle with the tension between personal identity and familial or cultural expectations. Pressure around achievement, emotional restraint, duty, and success can contribute to anxiety, shame, perfectionism, depression, and difficulty developing an authentic sense of self. These conflicts often impact relationships, career choices, and self-worth despite outward success.
Theresa Kimm is not in-network with any insurances.
Read about the benefits of seeing an out-of-network provider here.
This provider can support you in getting reimbursement from your insurance company if you are seeking out-of-network reimbursement. Here are the out-of-network billing options they provide:
Frequency of sessions this provider offers to see clients once you are an established client.
Please contact me to discuss the fee.
The practice will call you for a free 10 minute phone call to discuss your needs and ensure a match!
This provider has no upcoming call times available.