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Jon Richard, LPC - Therapist at Grow Therapy

Jon Richard

Jon Richard

LPC
4 years of experience
Virtual

I am a Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC) based in Austin, Texas. I graduated from the MAC (Masters of Arts in Counseling) program at St. Edward's University in 2014. I will always be thankful for the experience that I had at Capital Area Counseling during my post-graduate internship where I learned that my desire to become a counselor extended beyond the classroom and into the actual world.

What can clients expect to take away from sessions with you?

Though Solution-Focused Therapy tends to follow a question-based format, my personal style is more loose and conversational. Some of the open-ended questions I may ask would be, "What are your best hopes from attending this session?" or, "What do you know about yourself that says you can overcome social anxiety.". Sometimes, I will end the session with a scaling Question like, "On a scale of 1-10 (1 being 'terrible' and 10 being 'amazing'), how are you feeling right now." If the client is particularly unhappy and answers with a 2 or a 3, I reply with, "What is keeping you from feeling even worse? Where are you getting that strength? "

Explain to clients what areas you feel are your biggest strengths.

Over my first four years of being a counselor, I learned that I have soothing, relatable presence that makes clients feel safe even when a situation is challenging them to make changes in her/his lifestyle.

Describe the client(s) you are best positioned to serve.

Just by signing up with Grow Therapy, I know that you are committed to making things better. Therapy tends to follow the same "yes, and..." attitude that you'd find in an improv troupe. In both cases, there is a rapport that is based in mutual trust.

About Jon Richard

Identifies as

Man

Specializes in

Serves ages

Licensed in

Appointments

Virtual

My treatment methods

Solution Focused Brief Treatment

The best advice I ever received was, "it's better to be interested than interesting". This logic can be particularly helpful in therapy. A simple open-ended question can draw out a client, encourage her/him to explore character strengths and/or resources (support systems, for example).