When you need help on the job, you call for backup.

So why aren’t you calling for backup in your real life?

We know you think you’re a superhero, but you don’t have to be! You are a human first. You love your job, but it is kicking your ass. It’s time to stop letting pride get in the way. This life is the only one you’ve got, and you deserve to live it without the trauma, the buildup of stress and burnout, and the weight of responsibility robbing you of your peace of mind.

Medical team attending to a patient inside an ambulance with bright interior lighting at night.
Close-up of a police car's blue emergency light bar turned on at night.

Asking for help is a superpower.

Firefighter in gear walking away from burned brick building with smoke, holding a tool, near fire equipment.
A healthcare professional using a stethoscope to examine a young child's back in a clinic setting with a mountainous mural in the background.
A doctor dressed in surgical scrubs, wearing glasses, a face mask, and a hair cap, performing surgery in an operating room.

You show up for everyone else — but who shows up for you? This clinic is designed specifically for first responders: police, fire, EMS, corrections, nurses, and military personnel.

We understand the toll the job can take — the long shifts, the hypervigilance, the stress you carry home (or try not to).

Whether you're dealing with burnout, trauma, relationship strain, or just need a space to decompress, you’ll find support that’s confidential, culturally aware, and grounded in real experience.

We also support firse responder spouses and families — because the impact of the job doesn’t stop when you’re off duty.

Meet your backup.

A smiling woman with shoulder-length wavy blonde hair wearing a black blouse against a gray background.
A woman with shoulder-length blonde hair, blue eyes, wearing a maroon top and a silver chain necklace, smiling at the camera against a gray background.

Candice Webb, RP Qualifying

Amy Henderson, RP (Qualifying)

While working in human resources with first responders, Amy started to see a pattern: people who gave their all to the job and to protecting the public got lost within policy, paperwork and systems. That’s why she decided to learn more about providing support to the supporters. She gets the pressure you endure day in and day out, and she wants to teach you how to show yourself the commitment, passion and dedication you show to others.

After years of working with offenders and in policing, and being the partner of an officer, Candice has lived exprience in the first responder world. This has led her to pursue a different support role as a therapist for first responders of all backgrounds. She gets the culture, she knows the roadblocks, but she also knows how to get past this stuff and help you feel like yourself again (only stronger and even more resilient). If you want to change your relationship with the job, talk to Candice. Period.