David Levingston

David Levingston

Credentials: LMFT
Practice: David Levingston, LMFT
Phone: (415) 717-0918
E-mail: dlevingston@gmail.com
Location: 229 Western Ave, Brattleboro, Vermont 05301
Website: https://themissingexperience.com/
Insurance Accepted: Blue Cross Blue Shield, Beacon, CBA Blue, Catamount Blue, Anthem Blue Cross, Magellan, VT Medicaid, MVP Health Care, CIGNA, United HealthCare, United Behavioral Health, Coventry Health Care, TRICARE (Health Net Federal Services), MHN, Aetna, CBA/EBPA CompNet, BHS, Corphealth/LifeSynch, Managed Care Concepts, Martin's Point, MHNet Behavioral Health, Multiplan, ValueOptions, Perspectives, APS Healthcare
Fees: $100

Specializing In—
Anxiety, Depression, Grief, Life Transitions, Relationship Issues, Stress, Transgender

About

I have always had an interest in psychology and since 1999 have worked with people in different counseling contexts – younger people, older people, individuals, couples, and families. I participated in the Integral Counseling Psychology program at California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS) in San Francisco; I graduated with a Master's degree in the fall of 2003, and I earned my Marriage and Family Therapist license in January, 2007.

Before entering the counseling field professionally, I pursued a variety of experiences that I feel have widened my perspective and enable me to understand and relate to more people and what they might be going through. I had previously lived on the East Coast before going to the West Coast to earn a Master's degree in Art History. Over the years, I have made black & white photographs the old-fashioned way using a darkroom, tampered with digital imaging, made two trips to India, experienced the transformative potential of Vipassana meditation and Hatha Yoga, written creatively, and produced a book on Native American rock art of the Southwest. I hope this gives you some sense of the kind of person I am.

I continue to seek truth in different ways and gently push my edges. And I continue to appreciate the unassuming things that pass us by – both heard and seen, both ordinary and not so ordinary.