
Cultivation Liberation
Family Counseling and
Psychotherapy Inc.
You Don’t Have to Navigate This Life Thing Alone!
At Cultivation Liberation Counseling, we offer therapy that honors your full humanity — your story, identities, and the systems that shape your experience.
Whether you’re navigating stress, anxiety, depression, trauma, relationship challenges, identity exploration, or major life transitions, our work is grounded in a relational, trauma-informed, and liberation-centered approach. We believe healing is not about fixing you — it’s about understanding your patterns, supporting your nervous system, and creating new ways of relating to yourself and others.
We work with adults, teens, pre-teens, elders, couples, and families, with a focus on supporting teens struggling with social anxiety, addiction, disordered eating, and body image issues, neurodivergent (ADHD, AuDHD, ASD) individuals, LGBTQ+ and Trans+ communities, BIPOC, and those in nontraditional relationships, including queer and polyamorous/CNM partnerships.
We also have extensive experience supporting individuals and families impacted by domestic violence and intimate partner violence, including those seeking safety, resources, or support through transitions such as co-parenting.
We are committed to making therapy accessible through sliding scale options and by accepting Medi-Cal plans. Sessions are primarily offered via telehealth across California.
OUR VALUES
At Cultivation Liberation Counseling, we are guided by a set of core values that shape our work and interactions. We believe in cultivating radical acceptance, accountability, honesty, compassion, love, nourishment, and humor. Our warm and inviting environment is designed to make every individual feel seen, heard, and valued. We strive to create a non-judgmental space where everyone can express their authentic selves and receive the support they need to thrive.
OUR APPROACH
We take a non-pathological approach to diagnostics and assessments, focusing on empowering individuals to gain a deeper understanding of themselves and their communities. We recognize that mental health is deeply connected to social issues such as racism, sexism, misogyny, fat phobia, homophobia, and transphobia. By addressing and shifting our relationship to these issues, we can begin the healing process and work towards creating positive change in our communities.
