
Audrey Keaney is a therapist, researcher, and educator specializing in depth-oriented and somatic approaches to psychotherapy. She is a doctoral candidate in Clinical Psychology at Pacifica Graduate Institute, where her dissertation research focuses on women’s experiences of awe during childbirth. This work reflects her broader commitment to supporting the initiatory experiences of pregnancy, postpartum, and motherhood through both clinical practice and research. She holds a Master’s in Clinical Psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute and a Bachelor of Science in Biopsychology, Cognition, and Neuroscience from the University of Michigan.
Audrey’s therapeutic orientation integrates psychodynamic, Jungian, and somatic frameworks with mindfulness, parts work, and mind–body practices. She has a particular focus on psychedelic preparation and integration, exploring how these experiences intersect with unconscious processes, embodiment, and transformation. She works with concerns related to trauma, grief, mood disorders, spirituality, relationship and sexuality, women’s issues, and pregnancy, postpartum, and motherhood support.
In addition to her clinical work, Audrey is a certified yoga teacher and teaches at the VA, where she also supports clinical trials investigating yoga as a treatment for Alzheimer’s disease, chronic pain, and Lyme disease.
Experience & Training
PhD Candidate, Doctorate of Clinical Psychology with Emphasis in Depth Psychology, Pacifica Graduate Institute
MA, Clinical Psychology, Pacifica Graduate Institute
Psychotherapist in Private Practice, San Francisco Bay Area and Remote
Psychotherapist, Wellspring Psychology, Los Gatos, CA
Integrative Psychotherapist, California Pacific Medical Center, San Francisco, CA
Psychotherapist, Bay Area Clinical Associates, Berkeley, CA
Trauma-Informed Yoga Instructor - War Related Illness and Injury Study Center, Palo Alto Veterans Administration
Addiction Recovery Support, TCRC, Santa Cruz, CA
iRest Yoga Nidra Level 1 Training
BS, Biopsychology, Cognition, and Neuroscience, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor