Behold Counseling
Marriage & Family Therapy
A Thoughtful Practice
Behold Counseling was created with the desire to offer therapy that is both thoughtful and grounded.
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Our clinicians are trained in approaches that focus on emotional processing, attachment, and nervous system regulation. While each therapist brings their own personality and style to the work, we share a common perspective: that lasting change often happens when people are able to understand their emotional experiences with greater clarity and compassion.
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Therapy is not simply about solving problems. It is about making sense of the patterns that shape our lives and discovering new possibilities for how we relate to ourselves and others.

Our Values
Thoughtfulness
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We believe therapy should be approached carefully and with humility. People’s stories deserve time, attention, and respect.
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Emotional Honesty
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Meaningful change often begins when people feel safe enough to acknowledge what they are actually experiencing—whether that involves anxiety, grief, anger, shame, or confusion.
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Relational Understanding
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Many of the ways we experience ourselves and others are shaped in relationship. Therapy offers an opportunity to understand these patterns and develop healthier ways of connecting.
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Cultural Awareness
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Family systems, culture, and personal history shape how people understand themselves and the world around them. Our work remains attentive to these influences and the different contexts each client brings.
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Faith & Spiritual Sensitivity
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For some people, faith is an important source of meaning and support. For others, it may carry complexity or pain. We approach these conversations with care, allowing clients to determine if and how their spiritual life becomes part of the work.
The Meaning Behind the Name
The name Behold Counseling comes from a passage in Scripture that has shaped the way I think about change and healing.
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“Remember not the former things, nor consider the things of old.
Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?”
— Isaiah 43:18–19
​For a long time, I assumed it meant the past was simply meant to be left behind, as though what had already happened no longer carried meaning. Over time I’ve come to understand that passage less as an invitation to forget the past, and more as a reminder that the past does not have the final word.
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Most people come to therapy carrying experiences that have shaped them deeply—family patterns, relational wounds, expectations they learned early in life about who they needed to be in order to feel safe or loved. Those experiences matter, and part of therapy is taking the time to understand them honestly.
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When we begin to understand how those experiences shaped our emotions, reactions, and relationships, things that once felt confusing often start to make more sense.
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At the same time, the passage points to something hopeful. God speaks about doing something new—about life emerging in places that once felt stuck or painful.
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In many ways, that mirrors the process of therapy. As people begin to understand their stories more clearly, new ways of responding often begin to take shape. Old patterns loosen their grip. Relationships begin to shift. A person’s story begins to hold more possibility than it once did.
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The word behold is an invitation to pause and pay attention—to what has shaped us, and to the possibility that something new may still be unfolding.
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That spirit sits at the heart of this practice:
taking people’s stories seriously, while remaining open to the ways healing and renewal can still grow from them.