What We Treat

What We Treat

Compassionate Care. Meaningful Change.

What We Treat

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)

ADHD can affect focus, organization, time management, motivation, impulse control, and follow-through. It may show up as distractibility, restlessness, overwhelm, procrastination, or difficulty managing daily responsibilities, and therapy can help clients build practical strategies while also addressing shame, stress, and self-esteem.

What We Treat

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

We support autistic children, teens, and adults in navigating emotional regulation, sensory overwhelm, social challenges, identity development, anxiety, and life transitions. Therapy is tailored to the individual rather than forcing a one-size-fits-all approach.

What We Treat

Bipolar Disorders

We treat mood disorders including Bipolar I Disorder, Bipolar II Disorder, and related mood instability. Treatment focuses on understanding mood patterns, improving coping, strengthening routines, and supporting overall functioning and relationships.

What We Treat

Couples and Relationship Issues

We help couples address communication problems, conflict, trust issues, emotional disconnection, intimacy concerns, and recurring relationship patterns. Therapy can help partners build insight, improve connection, and work toward healthier ways of relating.

What We Treat

Depressive Disorders

We treat depression in its many forms, including Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) and Persistent Depressive Disorder (Dysthymia). Therapy may focus on low mood, hopelessness, burnout, loss of motivation, self-criticism, and difficulty reconnecting with daily life.

What We Treat

Family Issues

Family therapy can help with conflict, boundary problems, parenting stress, communication difficulties, blended family concerns, and major life transitions. We work to improve understanding, reduce tension, and strengthen family relationships.

What We Treat

Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)

GAD involves ongoing worry that can feel difficult to control and may affect sleep, concentration, irritability, and physical tension. Therapy helps clients understand the cycle of anxiety and develop more effective ways of responding to uncertainty and stress.

What We Treat

Grief and Loss

We help clients process grief related to death, divorce, relationship loss, health changes, identity shifts, and major life transitions. Therapy provides a space to grieve honestly while learning how to move forward without minimizing the loss.

What We Treat

Health Anxiety

Health anxiety involves persistent fear or preoccupation about illness, symptoms, or bodily sensations. Treatment helps clients reduce reassurance-seeking, catastrophic thinking, and hypervigilance while building a more grounded relationship with uncertainty and physical symptoms.

What We Treat

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)

Panic can feel overwhelming and may include racing heart, dizziness, shortness of breath, chest discomfort, derealization, or fear of losing control. Therapy helps clients understand panic, reduce fear of the sensations, and break the cycle that keeps panic going.

What We Treat

Panic Attacks and Panic Disorder

Panic can feel overwhelming and may include racing heart, dizziness, shortness of breath, chest discomfort, derealization, or fear of losing control. Therapy helps clients understand panic, reduce fear of the sensations, and break the cycle that keeps panic going.

What We Treat

Personality Pathology

We work with individuals experiencing long-standing patterns involving relationships, emotional regulation, self-image, impulsivity, or interpersonal distress. Treatment focuses on increasing insight, improving stability, and building healthier ways of coping and connecting.

What We Treat

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Trauma-Related Concerns

Trauma can affect mood, relationships, self-concept, the nervous system, and day-to-day functioning. We help clients process traumatic experiences, reduce avoidance, and move toward greater stability, safety, and emotional integration.

Where to Start:
If you are not quite sure where to begin, these brief self-screening tools can be a helpful first step. They are designed to give you a clearer sense of what you may be experiencing and whether it may be time to seek support. While these screenings are not diagnostic, they can help guide your next steps and make reaching out feel a little easier. Feel free to take a look and share the information with your provider.