Who We Are
OUR FOUNDATIONAL M.V.P
Foundational to a trauma-informed, attachment-based, and culturally diverse clinical practice is a clear mission, a guiding vision, and a purpose rooted in safety, trust, and connection. These principles inform every aspect of care at A New Beginning Counseling.
Our Mission
To provide compassionate, effective mental health care that recognizes the pervasive impact of trauma and promotes holistic healing. We create therapeutic environments and clinical strategies that prevent re-traumatization, honor individual and cultural contexts, and support recovery for diverse individuals and communities.
Our Vision
A world in which individuals, families, and communities thrive—supported by systems of care that understand, prevent, and heal trauma, and that foster empowerment, resilience, connection, and cultural respect.
Our Purpose
To integrate trauma awareness and attachment-based principles into every aspect of clinical practice, reducing stigma and strengthening resilience by honoring strengths, ensuring safety, and promoting genuine choice, collaboration, and connection.
PILLARS OF OUR PRACTICE
Trauma-Informed Care
- Safety – Prioritizing physical and emotional safety
- Trustworthiness & Transparency – Fostering honest, consistent relationships
- Peer Support – Valuing shared experiences as a source of healing
- Collaboration & Mutuality – Sharing power and decision-making
- Empowerment, Voice & Choice – Honoring strengths and autonomy
- Cultural, Historical & Gender Awareness – Actively addressing bias and respecting diversity
Attachment-Based Principles
- Secure Base – Providing consistent, reliable therapeutic support
- Emotional Regulation – Supporting awareness and management of emotions
- Exploration & Mastery – Encouraging growth from a place of safety
- Connection & Relationship – Valuing trust, attunement, and meaningful bonds
Culturally Diverse Practice
- Cultural Humility – Ongoing self-reflection and learning from clients
- Cultural Responsiveness – Tailoring care to each client’s cultural reality
- Historical Trauma Awareness – Recognizing collective and intergenerational impacts
- Inclusion – Actively valuing diverse identities, backgrounds, and lived experiences
A DIFFERENT KIND OF THERAPEUTIC EXPERIENCE
Together, these pillars form a comprehensive, strength-based framework that supports deep healing and sustainable growth in complex human experiences. Therapy at A New Beginning Counseling is not about quick fixes or surface-level change—it is about restoration, connection, and creating space for individuals to move forward with clarity, confidence, and support. This is not a place where clients are reduced to diagnoses. This is a place where healing is approached with intention, integrity, and care.
WHO WE SERVE
A New Beginning Counseling serves individuals, couples, and families seeking a therapeutic experience that is thoughtful, relational, and responsive to the complexities of real life. Our clients come from diverse backgrounds and life experiences, often navigating challenges shaped by trauma, relational disruption, identity-related stressors, and systemic pressures.
We recognize that no two healing journeys are the same. Our approach honors each client’s unique history, strengths, cultural context, and goals—meeting them where they are and supporting growth at a pace that feels safe and sustainable.
Individuals
Supporting adults and adolescents navigating trauma, anxiety, depression, attachment injuries, emotional regulation difficulties, identity-related stress, shame, and self-doubt.
Couples
Helping couples strengthen communication, repair trust, understand attachment-based patterns, and restore emotional connection during conflict, transitions, or relational distress.
Families
Working with families to address intergenerational patterns, improve communication, support emotional regulation, and restore balance and safety within the family system.
Culturally Diverse & Underserved Communities
Providing inclusive, culturally responsive care that acknowledges systemic inequities, historical trauma, and the lived realities of marginalized populations.