a mental health collective

healing practices for cultivating expansion, transformation, and radical acceptance

Our approach


The Liberation Coalition is a non hierarchical collective of trans, queer, and BIPOC identifying mental health professionals. We ground ourselves in a foundation of mutual trust and the desire to transcend old systems with inherent power inequities.

Providing you with an affirming space to connect and heal

The Liberation Coalition seeks to create something different; a space where our clients’ can seek healing and liberation from the long term impacts of living under the white supremacist, capitalist, cis-hetero patriarchy.

 

In-person and remote options

Our office is conveniently located in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Denver.

Can’t make it into the office? No worries – we’ve got you covered with teletherapy.

Our services

  • Individual Therapy

  • Relationship & Family Therapy

  • Shadow Work

  • Letter Writing

Meet our team

  • a photo of River, a white, trans masc therapist sitting in his office wearing a sleeveless white shirt and hat.

    River

    MA, LPCC, MFTC

    they/he

  • a photo of Nich

    Nich

    MA, LAC, MFTC

    he/him

  • a photo of Kara, a white, non-binary, femme therapist smiling and wearing a white button down shirt.

    Kara

    MA, LPC, Ed.S

    they/she

  • Kiani "Kannon"

    MA, LPC

    he/him

  • Avery

    MA, LPCC, MFTC

    they/she

“Becoming ourselves is a collective journey.”

— Alok Vaid - Menon

Get started with the liberation coalition, today.

Land Acknowledgement

We want to pay much deserved respect and gratitude to Native and Indigenous communities. We recognize the history of genocide and appropriation that has occurred historically and continues today. We recognize that we have benefited from Indigenous practices, culture, and knowledge - very often at the expense of the very communities, families, and teachers themselves.

We pay particular homage to the following communities who have been directly impacted by our occupation of their land: Tséstho’e (Cheyenne) Očhéthi Šakówiŋ hinono’eino’ biito’owu’ (Arapaho) Núu-agha-tʉvʉ-pʉ̱ (Ute) and natives of other tribal Nations.