
Helping others in life recovery
People often find their way here after years of trying to change patterns that feel deeply ingrained: cycles of addiction, emotional overwhelm, relationship strain, or behaviors that no longer match the life they want. Many have been through treatment programs, support groups, or short-term therapy that helped for a while but didn’t create the lasting change they hoped for. Others have never identified with “addiction treatment” at all, but know something in their life needs to shift.
Twin Lakes Therapy was created for people in that in‑between space. It exists for those who want something deeper, steadier, and more personal than the traditional recovery pipeline.
I’m Jason, the founder of Twin Lakes Therapy. Before becoming a therapist, I spent years navigating my own patterns of stress, depression, and alcohol use. That experience shaped me personally, but it also showed me the limitations of the systems people are often sent through. I saw how many individuals were offered programs instead of relationships, symptom management instead of understanding, and short-term solutions for long-term problems. I wanted to build something different.
My work is grounded in a simple belief: people do not heal through pressure, shame, or rigid programs. They heal through clarity, honesty, and a therapeutic relationship that helps them understand the purpose their behaviors once served and what might serve them better now. I approach therapy holistically, integrating mental health, emotional patterns, relationships, and the deeper stories that shape how we cope.
Over the past decade, I have helped many people move toward lives that feel more aligned, connected, and sustainable. You do not need to commit to quitting anything to begin this work. You only need a willingness to explore what is happening beneath the surface and to consider that change is possible, even if it has not worked before.
Twin Lakes Therapy exists because lasting recovery, whether from substances, patterns, or old ways of being, requires more than a program. It requires a place where you can slow down, understand yourself, and build a life that does not depend on the things that once kept you afloat.
