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To heal you will need to allow yourself to inquire into your own experience in ways that are not taught and they are not modeled. This is a process of healing which is not something that is learned, at least not like you and I think of learning. It is not as if you use the same skill set utilized in how to mop the floor, drive, or high level brain functioning. Those skills are important but they will not take you toward healing. They will not take you toward true maturity. They will not take you to freedom. Healing is not a process of rearranging your ideas about life. It is about giving oneself, and others, the full allowance of being human. That opens the door to exploring your own human nature. And this is what can make it so complex. To crack ourselves open, to take a look, takes true sincerity, curiosity, and a willingness to listen; not to me necessarily, maybe at first, but in the end to listen to yourself. That is where you will find everything you need.

It is interesting that we don’t learn to investigate our own sense of ourselves in any compelling way. It is from our day to day sense of self in which our action and thought spring from. Our very foundation, and yet it is profoundly neglected. We neglect this and we spring from a confused foundation which, in turn, produces confused actions. Leaping from a wobbly foundation will never produce powerful and clear action. Let’s firm up your foundation. Clear thought and action will follow.

“Life will become clearer when you decide to investigate your own lived experience first hand. Anything else is a substitute and will not provide clear sustained well-being.”

Rebecca Lucille, APRN

About Rebecca Lucille

Rebecca Lucille

Prior to starting her own private practice, Ms. Rebecca Lucille started out working as a nurse with acutely distressed psychiatric patients in a psychiatric hospital setting. She moved on to work with the seriously and persistently mentally ill population for several years. This was more enjoyable as she worked with her peers as a team, and a very effective team at that. The manager would often inquire as to how a particular intervention served the client. These clients needed advocates, and this was taken seriously. Although this setting was satisfying, she had always been drawn to psychotherapy. In high school, she recalls being enamored with M. Scott Peck’s book, “The Road Less Traveled.” Looking for something more challenging, she went back to school to further her education so she could engage in psychotherapy and prescribe medication. She received her master’s degree at the University of Utah; a few years later, she had a child; shortly thereafter, she started her own private practice.

Ms. Lucille limits her practice to issues involving depression, anxiety, trauma, bipolar disorder, and couples counseling.

Ms. Lucille’s 22 years of experience have helped to make her a presence that is not easily shaken. She resides in Mount Pleasant with her dog Sita and her 17-year-old son, Owen. Owen attends Wasatch Academy.

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Rebecca primarily works remotely but does come in to the physical office one to two days each week.

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