To Schedule an Appointment, Please Contact One of Our Therapists Directly or Call (626) 487-9305 or Email Us at appointments@nowiseeaperson.com
Who We Serve
We provide services for individuals, couples, children (including at-risk youth), and families for a wide variety of issues. We have experience working with problems ranging from severe mental health problems or diagnoses to relational or behavioral issues. Problems can range from symptoms of depression, anxiety, grief, family and couple conflict, school or behavioral challenge, phase of life issues, as well as organizational issues, among others.
What We Do
Our goal is to focus on the needs of the community by servicing all mental health populations. We focus on individual, couples, children, family and relational problems, including severe mental health diagnoses or relational difficulties, substance abuse, homelessness, education, wrap around services, work options, and enriching community support and involvement.
In our recovery model of community-based work, we work within the entire client system. It is a down/top type of venue where the client is the expert in their treatment and aides in directing the type of needs for treatment and community involvement. In all of our work we embrace the idea that severe mental illness, relational and behavioral problems, and addictions are often symptoms that make a person be seen as deficit. Often, all that is seen are symptoms and not the person, the context, nor the relationships in (or potential relationships within) the community. We think that most of the people we work with have the possibility of recovering their own agency, deciding for themselves the best solutions for their own situation and we provide the opportunity to empower themselves to design their own possibilities to live in a better way. One can just imagine how clients would value this type of therapeutic interaction. They come to a neutral environment outside of the institutional setting. They can feel the freedom of a different milieu. The milieu would not be viewed as part of the system they are in; in surpassing their environment, they have the freedom for free and non-judgmental discourse.
We hope to offer mental health providers, social workers, clinicians, and university educators the opportunity to witness this model where we include all present in the client’s “problem system” as active participants in the client’s community engagement. Therapists, psychiatrists, social workers, clients, and community supports are all team players on the client’s team.
These ideas are evidence-based and reflect the works of the Houston Galveston Institute, Kanankil Institute, Now I See A Person Institute, Miller, Cuncan, & Hubble (1997), Jaakko Seikula in Finalnd and the Rhizone Institute of Christopher Kinman and Lynn Hoffman.