I never set out to start a company. I set out to answer a question.
Why are so many Christians suffering alone when healing could be shared?
When I began working as a clinician, I saw the same pattern over and over again. People of faith came into my office exhausted, guilt-ridden, and afraid to name their pain. They didn’t doubt God—they doubted whether it was faithful to ask for help. In church, they heard “pray harder.” In therapy, they heard “let go of religion.” Neither answer felt like home.
That disconnect became my calling. The more I studied, the clearer it became that the problem wasn’t faith—it was fragmentation. We had built two languages for healing that didn’t know how to talk to each other.
The P.A.T.H. Model™ was my response to that silence.
During my doctoral research, I studied the barriers that prevent Christians from engaging in mental health support. What I found confirmed what I’d experienced in practice: stigma, fear of judgment, and a lack of integration between theological and psychological frameworks kept people stuck. Many described feeling torn—trusting their pastors with their souls and their therapists with their symptoms, but never feeling seen as a whole person.
I wanted to change that.
The P.A.T.H. Model™—rooted in Presence, Alignment, Truth, and Healing—became a bridge between those worlds. Drawing from Internal Family Systems (without “parts” language), Transpersonal Theory, and Hope Theory, it offered a language that respected faith while grounding itself in evidence-based practice. I saw it transform the way clinicians, pastors, and first responders approached human suffering.
But a model is only as powerful as the community that carries it. That’s why I founded this company—to train, equip, and connect helpers who believe that faith and neuroscience belong in the same room.
The company was never about branding; it was about stewardship. The work deserved a home—a place where clinicians could learn to integrate spirituality ethically, where pastors could talk about trauma without fear of heresy, and where clients could encounter compassion without having to edit their beliefs.
Our approach remains simple:
We teach leaders to cultivate presence rather than performance.
We help organizations realign with their values after seasons of burnout.
We offer psychoeducation that bridges theology and brain science in ways that feel natural, not forced.
And we measure transformation through tools like the P.A.T.H. Transformation Index™, ensuring that the work isn’t just inspiring—it’s effective.
Every therapist we train, every chaplain we consult, and every first responder we support becomes part of something larger: a quiet reformation in how the world understands healing.
The P.A.T.H. Model™ doesn’t ask people to choose between evidence and experience, science and spirit. It offers a language where all of them can coexist, harmonized by compassion.
This company exists for the people who have lived too long in between—the believers who felt unseen in therapy and the therapists who felt out of place in faith communities. It exists for those who knows healing is both measurable and mysterious.
At its core, this company is not about a model. It’s about a movement—one that believes emotional safety and spiritual depth can walk hand in hand.
Because we were never meant to heal in halves. Not half faith and half science. Not half body, half soul.
The P.A.T.H. Model™ exists to remind us that healing has always been whole—we’re simply learning how to live that truth again.




