Pitts Davis Counseling Services

Pitts Davis Counseling Services Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Pitts Davis Counseling Services, 7212 Joliet, Suite 1, Lubbock, TX.

08/23/2024
02/29/2024

Sheryl Boyle, LPC, BSp Consultant, and Pitts Davis, LMFT, Cert. BSp, will host a support group on Wednesday, March 13th at noon (CDT). The purpose of this group is to help support therapists who work with clients who demonstrate dissociative features share their experiences and learn from one another to better work with this population. Sheryl is known for her work with DID clients and recommended by Lisa Larson regularly to help therapists who need to know more about helping this population. Pitts has worked with clients with DID for over 35 years.

Join us by clicking this link:
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/83195741926?pwd=Znd3TkQ1eDFxY2ljSldIdGxwMWRzdz09

02/14/2024
06/25/2023

A quick lesson about autoimmune diseases. It takes an average of 3 years and 5 doctors for a person to get a proper diagnosis of an autoimmune disease. I just wish more people understood what an autoimmune disease is. It is not a cold or the flu, you will never get better, and even a nap will not help. Just eating a salad and hitting the gym won’t slim your face or get the pounds off. Sleeping 10 hours doesn’t leave you well rested, ever. Last minute changes in plans because that “just got ran over” feeling never makes appointments, just walks in whenever you aren’t ready. Achy joints and bones, dry skin, breaking hair, mood swings, and depression are just the tip of the iceberg. You are also prone to having multiple autoimmune diseases.
The “put together on the outside”, rarely matches the raging battle on the inside.
I am watching the ones who will take the time to read this entire post and react.
Please, in honor of someone who is fighting POTS, MCAD, Sjogren's, Scleroderma, Hashimoto Disease, Hypothyroidism, Ankylosing Spondylitis, Fibromyalgia, Lupus, Sarcoidosis, CVID, RSDS, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Hepatitis, Raynauld's Syndrome, Diabetes, Mold Illness, Celiac, Crohn’s, CRPS/RSD, Ulcerative Colitis, Pemphigus, Neuropathy, SPS, MS, PBC, Psoriatic Arthritis, CIDP, Behcet's, Alopecia, MMN And GPA .Copy and paste to your page and reply "DONE" on mine.
Unfortunately, most of us know someone fighting against one or more Autoimmune Diseases. ❤️💙💚🧡💛🩵🤍🩷

Best way of saying this I’ve seen:  connect, hold space and just be.
03/11/2023

Best way of saying this I’ve seen: connect, hold space and just be.

Quote of the Day

02/18/2023

Relationship conflict can cause one or both partners to feel overwhelmed, or “flooded.” This physiological arousal sometimes leads to stonewalling, one of Dr. John Gottman’s 4 predictors of relationship instability.

Certified Gottman Therapist Laura Silverstein, LCSW shares strategies for how to minimize flooding and stonewalling in your relationship: http://bit.ly/3E1C759

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Please note: social media is not a substitute for individualized support, and our posts are not meant to address situations of abuse. If you are in need of support, please contact https://www.thehotline.org/

Excellent article!
07/06/2021

Excellent article!

There's no wrong way to grieve. For many it arises as anxiety or fear, but we can move through that grief and emerge feeling safe again.

12/10/2020

This is for your information, not open to debate, please don’t react just read and think.

A physician I greatly respect posted this. It was not his words, but from a very knowledgeable physician. I am sharing it for educated information, not hype and NOT to debate you on your Google search.

Shared from a global physician group (not my own words!)

Please read this which will answer FAQs and debunk myths (no, mRNA will not alter your DNA)
The FDA is likely going to approve the Pfizer Covid vaccine when they meet on December 10th. The Moderna vaccine will probably be approved shortly thereafter. This is an incredible feat of modern medicine, and our best chance to hopefully get our lives back to near normal relatively soon. However, it is new and it was done quickly, so understandably, people may be hesitant to get it; even people who vaccinate against all other diseases.
Will I be getting the vaccine? ABSOLUTELY.
But, it is a new vaccine technology and done in record time, so aren't I worried about its safety? Nope, not any more so than any other vaccine or other medical intervention.
Why? Let's start with how this vaccine works. This is an mRNA vaccine. Past vaccines typically use a live but weakened "attenuated" virus, or dead viral material "inactivated" virus, or a piece of the virus's protein or even a toxin produced by the virus. The Covid vaccine is very different. It contains mRNA (messenger genetic material) that encodes for the Covid spike protein. This causes your cells to then produce the Covid spike protein. In contrast, when you are sick with Covid, the virus hijacks your cell to produce many copies of the entire virus. Then it destroys the cell, busting it open to release its newly formed viral particles. When your cells release just the spike protein, it will stimulate your immune system to form antibodies to the Covid spike protein without you getting sick. There is no possibility of getting Covid from the vaccine. When your body is subsequently exposed to Covid, it will quickly recognize the spike protein and destroy it before it can make you sick. This was 90-95% effective in preventing Covid, which is an even better percentage than most other vaccines. However, you must take both doses (about 3-4 weeks apart).
Am I concerned about it being new? And previously untested? No, I'm not. This type of technology is not entirely new. It has been studied and used in cancer research. They have been making mRNA vaccines and studying them to specifically target proteins on tumor cells and train your immune system to then destroy the tumor. In this case, it is not a vaccine in the preventive sense, as it is targeted to a tumor that you already have. It is not currently widespread because it has to be custom made for each tumor. But, it has been "around the block" for a while now. The technology was also being studied for other Coronaviruses. It never came to fruition, because the diseases never reached pandemic proportions, and then the funding dried up. The mRNA does not enter the nucleus of the cell, and it does not affect your DNA, and therefore has no lasting impact on your cell.
Am I concerned about the speed with which it was developed? Weren't significant corners cut in order to get this out so quickly? No and no. What was cut out of the equation was mostly red tape, and what was added was technology and funding. We were given the genetic code by scientists in China to start vaccine production in January; before Covid was even documented to have reached our shores. From there, the vaccine was developed from the technology we had from the prior Coronavirus and cancer research, and was completed in March. Normally, there would be months of waiting for the FDA to even look at the work done prior to approving Phase 1 trials. Because of the urgent nature of this, it was essentially put on the top of the wait pile, which cut out months of waiting, but did not cut any corners. Between the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines (both mRNA, with a slightly different delivery system), they were tested in 37,000 people in Phase 3 (and an additional 37,000 received a placebo). That is on par with, if not better than the vaccines currently available.
Aren't I concerned that the FDA is about to approve it, and there may be side effects that haven't been seen yet? Nope on this one too. We know from decades of vaccine research, since you typically just get 1, 2 or 3 doses and then you are done with it, that nearly all side effects from vaccines occur in the first 6 weeks. Like other vaccines, minor side effects may occur(soreness at injection site, muscle aches, fever). Severe adverse reactions are extremely rare, and again, occur quickly if they are going to occur at all. As a healthy 30-something year old woman, my risk of dying from COVID is not zero! And even if I don't die from it, I could have long term lung damage and other issues that affect my quality of life. Because vaccines are given to healthy people (unlike medications for treating a disease that is already present) they are held to a much higher standard for approval. My risk of having a significant adverse reaction from the Covid vaccine is minuscule in comparison to my risk with Covid. In fact, there have been no severe reactions to the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine to date.
For the rest of the population (outside of healthcare workers or those in nursing homes), who will likely be able to get the vaccine in February or March, there will be even more time passed and more people who have received the vaccine to be the "guinea pigs" here.
Anyone who is pregnant - it has not yet been tested in your group (although I do know that many pregnant front line health care workers are planning to take it). For those under 18 years old - it is also not yet tested. Moderna is starting a trial. Hopefully it will be approved by summer. But for everyone else, I highly recommend getting it as soon as you can; for you, for your loved ones, for those who cannot (perhaps because they are immunocompromised), for the many businesses that are on the verge of permanent shut down, and for kids to safely return to schools. I will be rolling up my sleeve for it as soon as it is offered.
If you'd like, please do feel free to cut and paste on your own social media sites. Sharing of information is so important to combating this pandemic. We have now surpassed 15 million documented Covid cases in our country (5 million of which were in the last 30 days) and over 2,000 people are dying per day.
I would like to credit the original MD who wrote this so eloquently but she does not want to be stalked by militant anti-vaxxers.
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6You and 5 others

03/27/2020

You have traveled too fast over false ground;
Now your soul has come, to take you back.

Take refuge in your senses, open up
To all the small miracles you rushed through.

Become inclined to watch the way of rain
When it falls slow and free.

Imitate the habit of twilight,
Taking time to open the well of color
That fostered the brightness of day.

Draw alongside the silence of stone
Until its calmness can claim you.

Be excessively gentle with yourself.

JOHN O'DONOHUE

Excerpt from the blessing, 'For One Who is Exhausted,' from John's books:
Benedictus (Europe) / To Bless the Space Between Us (US)

Ordering Info: https://johnodonohue.com/store

Connemara, Co. Galway / Ireland
Photo: © Ann Cahill

Address

7212 Joliet, Suite 1
Lubbock, TX
79423

Opening Hours

Monday 2:30pm - 7:30pm
Tuesday 9am - 8:30pm
Wednesday 9am - 6pm
Thursday 9am - 7pm

Telephone

+18067854801

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