Coaching vs Therapy
What is coaching and how does it
differ from therapy?
Coaching and therapy both provide valuable support, but they serve different purposes.
Therapy is designed to diagnose, treat, and heal mental health conditions. It often focuses on processing the past, resolving deep emotional wounds, and addressing clinical concerns such as depression, trauma, or anxiety disorders.
Coaching is different.
Coaching is forward-focused and growth-oriented. It is designed for individuals who are ready to build skills, strengthen habits, improve self-awareness, and create meaningful change in their daily lives. Rather than diagnosing or treating mental health conditions, coaching focuses on development, decision-making, emotional regulation, confidence, communication, and practical life strategies.
In simple terms:
Therapy helps heal.
Coaching helps build.
Many people who seek coaching are capable, intelligent, and psychologically healthy, yet they feel stuck, overwhelmed, unmotivated, uncertain, or caught in unhelpful patterns. Coaching provides structure, perspective, accountability, and tools to help them move forward with greater clarity and confidence.
Coaching may be a good fit if you or your child are looking to:
• Build confidence and resilience
• Improve motivation and follow-through
• Strengthen communication skills
• Develop healthier habits and routines
• Navigate academic, social, or life stress
• Gain clarity about goals, identity, or direction
If clinical mental health support is needed, therapy is the appropriate path, and I am always happy to help guide families toward the right resources. I maintain professional relationships with psychologists, social workers, family therapists, acupuncturists, nutritionists, and behavioral health specialists. I will happily make referrals when it is in the best interest of the client.