The Mission

To restore alignment, resilience, and vitality in the lives of those aged 30-60 through the power of presence.

silhouette photo of man on cliff during sunset

People We Serve

  • Those experiencing burnout or chronic stress

  • Those feeling "off" or out of alignment in their personal or professional life.

  • Those going through transitions such as career shifts, divorce, or spiritual renewal.

  • Those who want to understand why there seems to be a block in progress and recurring cycle.

  • Those who desire a faith-based approach to healing and personal growth.

silhouette photo of man on cliff during sunset
silhouette photo of man on cliff during sunset
  1. Restore Human Presence as a Healing Modality

    To reintroduce authentic, faith-rooted human connection as a vital component of emotional, psychological, and spiritual well-being - countering isolation, burnout, and disconnection through intentional, relationship-based support.

  1. Guide Individuals Toward Relational Coherence

    To help clients align thought, emotion, faith and environment - fostering internal balance/harmony/peace that leads to resilience, vitality, and renewed purpose.

Lifeside Objectives

  1. Bridge Faith and Psychology for Everyday Application

    To provide structured, ongoing relational support that empowers clients to build self-awareness, emotional regulation, and spiritual steadiness over time rather than through momentary insight.

  1. Bridge Faith and Psychology for Everyday Application

    To integrate biblical wisdom with evidence- based psychological understanding, offering a balanced approach that honors both spiritual truth and human experience.

  1. Create an Accessible, Compassionate Model of Care

    To ensure faith- based relational support remains accessible to diverse individuals through flexible session formats, sliding fee options, and outreach to those navigating transition or financial hardship.

"High levels of social connection predicted greater post-traumatic growth after major stress..."(Matos et al., 2021)