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Guiding Beliefs

Belief statements that guide our strategy and efforts to design products and services that will get real results. These are derived from years of research and actual experience helping our clients improve their lives for the better.

The diagnosis of issues like anxiety and depression is somewhat subjective and not binary (i.e., typically not helpful to make declarative statements of identity when experiencing symptoms of depression, anxiety, addiction, etc. that exist on a fluid scale).
Disconnection from a values system, from sense of purpose historically found in community, strong family life, or religion, and the absence of deep and meaningful relationships are bigger drivers of emotional fragility and mental illness than is disordered brain biochemistry.
Interventions centered in principles of positive psychology ? promoting mental wellness and human flourishing ? tend to inspire more hope and action than approaches rooted in the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness ? resulting in more compelling and durable outcomes.
Lifestyle interventions such as nutrition, exercise, sleep, breathing exercises, gratitude practices, and mindfulness practices are essential components of physical and mental wellness.
The body and the mind have miraculous abilities to heal themselves.
There is a powerful mind-body-gut connection that is underutilized in conventional medical treatment ? largely due to systemic design flaws and reimbursement limitations.
Nutrient deficiency is a root cause of many mental health challenges. Even the most disciplined diets lack essential vitamins and minerals (challenges with food supply chain, depleted soils, farming techniques, etc.) and consequently supplementation is essential. In many cases micro-nutrient solutions can be more effective than medications.
Coaching for encouragement, connection, structure, and accountability is often more effective and economic than medical or other therapy-centered interventions (at least, it is an underutilized extender). This has proven true in every population we have served.
Most of the benefits of coaching can be achieved more economically in cohort-model group settings if supported with individualized goal setting. Cohort-model groups also create relationships and peer accountability that is often missing for individuals dealing with mental health difficulties.
Some people need acute interventions like TMS, pharmaceutical therapies, and ketamine-assisted psychotherapy to help them get to a level of health where coaching and lifestyle interventions will be adopted and efficacious.
Data suggests that environmental or life stressors (acute or chronic) are more frequently the cause of mental/emotional disorders than biological deficiencies.
Insurance reimbursement is a barrier to accessing support for effective lifestyle interventions ? robust outcomes data is the key to addressing this barrier.

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