Supervision

Our Approach

Our supervision practice is grounded in shared values that guide everything we do:

  • Trauma-informed support that recognises the emotional demands of therapeutic work
  • Reflective, collaborative conversations informed by the Seven-Eyed Model
  • Ethically focused practice, keeping clients’ wellbeing at the centre
  • Respectful, human relationships where supervisor and supervisee meet as equals
  • A commitment to sustainability, resilience, and practitioner wellbeing

We aim to offer supervision that is warm, steady, and grounded in real-world therapeutic experience.

Our Collaboration

As co-founders of Coastal Wellbeing, we draw on years of shared experience across private practice, community and voluntary sectors, and reflective practice facilitation. Our work has included supporting people around mental health, addiction recovery, caring roles, and suicide prevention. This collective background gives us a deep, grounded understanding of the emotional and ethical realities of helping professions.

Our collaborative foundation shapes the way we offer supervision: thoughtful, compassionate, and centred on the wellbeing of both practitioners and their clients.

Meet the Supervisors

Photo of Molly

Molly offers warm, reflective supervision grounded in the Seven-Eyed Model. Her approach supports counsellors to think deeply about their work, explore challenges with confidence, and strengthen both clinical skills and personal resilience. She has a particular interest in supporting carers and those in emotionally demanding roles, with a strong awareness of burnout, boundary pressures, and the weight of holding others.

Photo of Lucy Tucknott

Lucy is a trauma-informed supervisor offering reflective, collaborative guidance to help therapists build confidence, strengthen clinical skills, navigate complex cases, and develop professional resilience. Her approach is grounded in the Seven-Eyed Model and shaped by a commitment to ethical, relational supervision where practitioners feel respected, safe, and able to reflect openly on their work.