Sixteen years.
The full range.
Most clinicians specialize in one lane. That's not how this works.

Rooms most clinicians
read about
in textbooks.
Sixteen years across crisis intervention, trauma, addiction, family systems, marriage and family therapy, and suicide prevention.
Combat service taught me pressure, proximity to collapse, and what it takes to hold the line when everything around you is breaking.
That background doesn't make me better than anyone else. It makes me the right fit for a specific kind of person the one who needs someone who has actually seen what they're carrying, and isn't going to flinch at it.
The people who carry
the weight of others.
Executives. Founders. Military and first responder leadership. Physicians. Politicians. Public figures. Professional athletes. The high performers carrying something nobody around them has time to see and the families navigating around them.
The work has nothing to do with income bracket. It has everything to do with what the person is responsible for, what they're carrying privately, and what would happen if it broke.
What I've worked
across the years.
- Crisis intervention
- Trauma and post-traumatic stress
- Addiction and recovery
- Family systems and dynamics
- Marriage and couples therapy
- Suicide prevention
- High-performance and executive environments
- Public figures and the families around them
I don't believe in
indefinite therapy.
I never have.
I believe in understanding what's in the way, working through it with precision and intention, and getting you to the other side of it.
Some people need long-term support. Most need someone who can move with them not someone who builds a practice on keeping them comfortable in the room.
The goal is your highest self clear, capable, and moving.
Every engagement has direction. You always know what we're working toward and where you stand.
Direct language. Clinical precision. No jargon designed to make you feel managed rather than understood.
The people who come through here carry different weights. The work is built around what's in the way not a protocol.
The best time to work on something is before it becomes a crisis. The work doesn't have to start after the explosion.
Trained as
a therapist.
Sixteen years of clinical practice, crisis management, trauma, addiction, family systems, marriage and family therapy, suicide prevention. Combat veteran. Texas-based, available nationally for private clinical support.
Kyden Point is private clinical advisory not insurance-coded clinical care. The clinical foundation is what's behind the work. The model is built differently.
This is a position,
not a policy.
I don't work with insurance because my clients can't afford for their mental health to be anyone else's business.
Insurance requires a formal diagnosis that becomes a permanent part of your medical record. It grants third-party access to your file. It restricts what can be addressed, how long the work can take, and what is considered clinically appropriate. It puts a utilization manager someone who has never met you between you and the person doing the work.
The people I work with operate in environments where that record is a liability. A diagnosis in the wrong hands costs careers, contracts, custody, security clearances. The practice is built private. That doesn't change.
If what you've read
fits, reach out.
Availability is limited by design. No intake team. Direct contact only.
Schedule a Consultation