Your Mental Health Matters -- and So Does Your Community's
Free, culturally responsive education to help you understand behavioral health, recognize warning signs, reduce stigma, and know when and where to seek support.
Build Understanding
Clear, jargon-free education about what behavioral health really means for everyday life.
Reduce Stigma
Open, honest conversations that challenge myths and create space for healing and help-seeking.
Access Support
Practical guidance on when to reach out, where to go, and what to expect from care.
What We Cover
Our community workshops address topics that matter most to families and individuals across all ages and backgrounds.
Ages 0-5
Focused on infant and early childhood mental health, these sessions explore how very young children grow emotionally and socially, what healthy development looks like at each stage, and how early experiences shape the foundation for lifelong well-being.
Parenting
Designed to help parents understand and tune in to their child's behaviors, these sessions offer practical, nurturing ways to respond -- strengthening the parent-child relationship while building confidence in everyday caregiving moments.
Adults & Youth
We provide accessible information on both mental illness and mental wellness -- what different conditions look like, how they affect daily life, and how people of all ages can build and sustain good emotional health.
Self-Care
These sessions focus on practical, everyday strategies for managing stress, building emotional resilience, and maintaining wellness -- tools that individuals and families can begin using right away, no clinical background required.
All Ages
Some experiences -- like grief, loss, and trauma -- affect people across every stage of life. These sessions provide culturally sensitive education on how difficult life events impact the mind and body, and what healing can look like.
Getting Help
We help you navigate the behavioral health system with confidence -- understanding what types of care exist, how to find the right provider, what to expect when you reach out, and how to advocate for yourself or someone you love.
Recognizing Early Signs of Distress
Early recognition is one of the most powerful tools we have. These signs don't necessarily mean something is "wrong," but they are worth paying attention to -- in yourself, your children, or someone you care about.
Everyday Practices That Protect Mental Health
Prevention is not about avoiding all hardship -- it is about building the inner resources to navigate it with more resilience.
Stay Connected
Strong social ties are one of the greatest protective factors for mental health. Nurture relationships even when it feels hard to reach out.
Name Your Feelings
Putting words to emotions -- especially with children -- helps regulate the nervous system and reduces the intensity of difficult feelings.
Establish Routine
Predictable rhythms for sleep, meals, and daily activity provide a sense of safety and reduce anxiety for children and adults alike.
Move Your Body
Regular physical activity -- even a short daily walk -- has significant, evidence-based benefits for mood, sleep, and stress levels.
Limit Stressors When Possible
Set boundaries around news consumption, difficult relationships, or situations that consistently drain your energy without benefit.
Ask for Help Early
Reaching out before a crisis is a sign of strength. The earlier support is sought, the more options are available.
Breaking the Stigma
Why it matters -- and what you can do.
Stigma -- the fear of judgment, shame, or discrimination around mental health -- is one of the most significant barriers that prevents people from seeking help. In many communities, mental health challenges may be seen as personal weakness, a spiritual failing, or something to be handled only within the family. These beliefs, while often rooted in cultural values, can cause real harm when they stop someone from getting care they need.
You can help change this. Talking openly about mental health, sharing your own experiences when it feels safe, listening without judgment to others, and using respectful, person-first language all contribute to a culture where help-seeking is normalized -- and where no one has to suffer in silence.
Free Virtual Learning Sessions
All workshops are free, one hour, and hosted via Zoom. Sessions are available in English and Haitian Creole. No experience or background in mental health is needed.
Supporting Social Emotional Learning in Young Children
This one-hour virtual workshop focuses on children ages 0–5. You will learn how to define and recognize healthy social-emotional development, understand key developmental stages, support this growth at home, and identify behaviors that may signal a need for professional support.
Managing Challenging Behavior in Young Children
This one-hour virtual workshop explores the challenging behaviors that commonly emerge in children ages 0–5. You will learn why these behaviors happen, practical strategies for responding with confidence, warning signs that may indicate underlying concerns, and guidance on when and where to seek professional help.
At this time we will be continuing with the topic of Supporting Social Emotional Development in Young Children. We will move on to Managing challenging Behaviors in Young Children in May. The dates are currently TBD.
Not Sure Where to Start? We Can Help.
You don't need to figure this out alone. Whether you're concerned about yourself, your child, or someone you care about — reaching out is the right first step. Our team is here to connect you with the right support.
March 4, 2026 -- 11:00 AM
