Dr. Debi Warner has combined
her three decades of family practice in psychology
with her love of home renovating to bring you
a great resource for harmonious domestic construction.
Helping with everything on this side of the hammer
- the teamwork, the approach to tasks, the organization,
and the follow-through.
Dr. Warner has been seeing
patients when she began advanced study in 1975.
Beginning with well supervised practice in the
Clinical Psychology program at Bowling Green
State University in Ohio, Dr. Warner then did
her internship at the University of Rochester
Medical School and further postdoctoral work
in Rochester prepared her for a well varied
career in clinical practice with all ages. Her
work has included children and families, parenting,
substance issues, trauma and recovery, attention
deficits and learning disabilities, and domestic
violence work with both victims and offenders.
Dr. Warner's style is warm
and respectful, and always building on what
the client brings as strengths to the situation.
She is especially able to explain important
psychological concepts in common terms while
enriching our understanding of applications
for useful practice.
Dr. Warner has a long background
in home renovation. Her father was a wallpaper
designer and so involved her as a child helping
him hang wallpaper each time he launched his
new designs. Perhaps nurturing Dr. Warner's
interest in building, the family had a long
term renovation project converting their 200
year old barn into an art studio. As a pre-teen,
Debi came home after school and watched the
carpenter as he took the massive walls apart
and carefully crafted new walls and structures,
seemingly out of thin air. Many questions later,
Debi had a deep appreciation for building methods,
its logic, and the people who do such work.
In her own homes, Dr.
Warner with family has renovated two kitchens,
three bathrooms, many windows and doors, added
a 4,000 square foot addition, and plumbed heating
and supply lines for all of that, tiled endlessly,
(they offered her a day job at the tile store),
and pulled a mile of wire (really). Her curiosity
does not seem to wane as she observes the experiences
of these projects and applies her clinical eye
to real life.
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