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Our Director
Dr. Morris holds a doctorate in counseling psychology and is a Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor along with being registered and certified in both Kansas and Missouri as a substance abuse counselor. The doctor’s training and his 17 years of experience also allow him to offer particular types of therapies that set his treatment and his level of success apart from others. Besides his very successful holistic treatments, one such therapy is EMDR, or Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing. This therapy is a very successful therapy used primarily with trauma patients.
Dr. Morris is a therapist
with a rich background of wide-ranging life experiences. These experiences
allow him to bring a wealth of practical life wisdom into your counseling
experience. His past experiences in the both the business world and the
ministry help Dr. Morris to relate to his patients in a very down-to-earth
manner. Yet at the same time, these experiences also help him to help
patients who may be dealing with life concerns that have spiritual meaning,
purpose, and hope. In addition, Dr. Morris has worked in a number of various
treatment milieus, from homeless shelters and community based mental-health
treatment agencies to private-pay psychiatric hospitals and private-practice
multi-disciplinary treatment centers.
One of Dr. Morris’s great
interests and areas of expertise is the management of neurochemistry using a
holistic approach. This allows him, when it is prudent, to help his clients
change their diets in such a way as to allow them to take full benefit of
previously prescribed psychotropic medications or to gain enough benefit
that medications may not be necessary. With this piece in place, Dr. Morris
promotes a holistic approach to treatment that combines both the
physiological, the psychological, and the spiritual elements of treatment
that our firm strongly believes is essential to treating the “whole-man”.
Without this foundation, we believe an individual may still improve in a
focused treatment milieu; however they may never find or be treated for the
primary or causal source of their symptoms. Therefore, treatment may only
provide temporary improvement or abatement of an individual’s symptoms.
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