Our Services: Counseling/Therapy & Neuropsychological Testing
"We trust Dr. Nikki and the methodology of this practice. We've known friends who have seen remarkable progress b/c [sic] of the care and guidance you have provided." - Adult Patient
Our providers are dedicated to helping you sort through your symptoms, problems and challenges. Our services are:
- Compassionate...and challenging.
- Supportive…and effective.
- Evidenced-Based…and personalized to you and your particular set of challenges. *Not Pictured: Dr. Laura Daniels
We have significant expertise in treating many problems people encounter, from childhood through later life. Our treatment is systemic—focusing also on the role of couple, family, and community relationships, and how they exacerbate (our help resolve) life and clinical problems.
We thoroughly assess and treat a wide variety of difficulties you may be experiencing.
We do not think in terms of appointments, but in terms of people, and how to carefully treat the case. We do not schedule our appointments like a Pediatrician’s office or Primary Care Physician’s office. Many of our patients have had difficulty with continuity of care after starting counseling in other practices (e.g. not being able to get a second appointment for months after the initial appointment).
- down,
- not like yourself,
- overwhelmed,
- confused,
- or in any type of emotional, behavioral, psychological, or relational pain
should be AS NORMAL, AS EXPECTED, AS ACCEPTED as seeing your Primary Care Physician when you have physical symptoms, like symptoms of the flu or strep throat.
We think everyone deserves to have a professional that operates as their Mental Health Primary Care Provider. Come in and get the help you need now and then return when it is time for a check-up or there are new things you'd like to address. You can count on us to be there, remember you and your story, and know your history intimately. We are especially moved when our child patients return to us during the challenges of adolescence, when our patients go off to college and pop back in, and when child/teen patients return to work on new stuff (like becoming an adult, starting their careers, or forming a family of their own).
“Mental pain is less dramatic than physical pain, but it is more common and also more hard to bear. The frequent attempt to conceal mental pain increases the burden: it is easier to say “My tooth is aching” than to say “My heart is broken.”― C.S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain