About Carrie Ishee

Carrie T. Ishee, M.A., LPCC, LPAT, ATR-BC, PCC

Carrie T. Ishee is a licensed professional clinical counselor, board certified licensed art therapist, professional certified coach, speaker, and award-winning author with a private practice in Santa Fe, NM. She specializes in somatic-based creative expressive approaches to healing.

Early in her career she studied Clinical Psychology at Virginia Commonwealth University with a focus in Behavioral Medicine. She  held clinical and research assistant positions at the Johns Hopkins University Hospital in the Department of Behavioral Pediatrics (post graduate internship at the Kennedy Institute), the University of Maryland Hospital Intensive Behavioral Management Program, and in the Department of Orthognathic Surgery at the Medical College of Virginia.

Over a period of ten years, Carrie served as an adjunct faculty member at Southwestern College in Santa Fe, NM. The classes she taught included “Art Therapy in the Assessment and Treatment of Addictions,” “Art Therapy Techniques,” and “Internship Seminar.”

Carrie’s therapeutic work embraces a holistic paradigm recognizing body, mind, and spirit in the healing process, with a focus on helping abuse victims access their creativity to restore their sense of self and healthy nervous system functioning.

Carrie’s clinical specialties include trauma, substance abuse, sex and love addictions, mood disorders, anxiety, relationship issues, and adjustment disorders.  She has worked in inpatient, intensive outpatient, and private practice settings.  Drawing on her background as both a therapist and a coach, Carrie trained first responders in stress management and life balance skills for both the City of Santa Fe and the State of New Mexico.

Carrie’s own experience of healing from soul shattering trauma is documented in Seduced into Darkness:  Transcending My Psychiatrist’s Sexual Abuse.  Her memoir won first place in the 2021 Communications Contest for both the New Mexico Press Women and the National Federation of Press Women. As part of her healing, she took her abuser to court, won two legal battles, filed an ethics complaint with his professional licensing board, and testified before the Maryland General Assembly to petition for a bill to form a task force to study doctor-patient violations.

Carrie’s activism led CBS News “48 hours (with Dan Rather)” to profile her case on its national show before an audience of millions in 1993.  Today she continues to serve as an advocate for other survivors of therapeutic exploitation and educates both the public and the profession on the dangers and process of the slippery slope of boundary violations.

Carrie feels honored to be a voice for hope and healing and is dedicated to informing the public about mental health, treatment options, overcoming abuse, and the great potential there is for transforming trauma through her authentic speaking engagements and course offerings.