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Resources

The information on this Resources page is for general informational and educational purposes only and is not a substitute for legal advice, medical care, or services from a licensed mental health professional. Mind Monarch Services LLC (“Mind Monarch”) does not provide legal representation, medical treatment, or psychotherapy, and nothing on this page creates an attorney‑client, therapist‑client, or fiduciary relationship.

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Mind Monarch does not endorse, guarantee, or assume responsibility for any third‑party individuals, organizations, services, or websites referenced or linked on this page, nor for any outcomes that may result from contacting or working with them. Your use of any third‑party resource is solely at your own discretion and risk.

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By using this Resources page, you agree not to hold Mind Monarch, its owners, or its contractors liable or responsible for any information, advice, services, or outcomes obtained from third‑party resources listed here or accessed through links on this site.

​Mental Health

Suicide Prevention and Crisis Lines

Sexual and/or
​Domestic Abuse Assault

Addiction Recovery

The Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator is an online source of information for persons seeking treatment facilities in the United States or U.S. Territories for mental health problems and/or substance abuse/addiction.

Get Mental Help, Inc., was formed in May of 2001 to assist Mental Health Consumers in finding high quality information and resources, and to assist in whatever possible way in their treatment and recovery. Includes links to therapists and support groups in your area as well as statistics and polls.

Find A Therapist connects you with licensed mental health professionals including psychologists, clinical social workers, marriage and family therapists, and professional counselors.

Call or Text 988
Online Chat option available: 988lifeline.org

​Pain isn’t always obvious, but most suicidal people show some signs that they are thinking about suicide. The signs may appear in conversations, through their actions, or in social media posts. If you observe one or more of these warning signs, especially if the behavior is new, has increased, or seems related to a painful event, loss, or change, step in or speak up.

24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year, the National Domestic Violence Hotline provides essential tools and support to help survivors of domestic violence so they can live their lives free of abuse. 1(800) 799-7233 

1(800) 656-HOPE or www.RAINN.org
This Hotline will connect you to the nearest Rape Crisis Center.

This is the official Verbal Abuse information site, featuring Patricia Evans, an internationally recognized Interpersonal Communications Specialist and author of the first book about Verbal Abuse. 

NSVRC provides research & tools to advocates working on the frontlines to end sexual harassment, assault, and abuse with the understanding that ending sexual violence also means ending racism, sexism, and all forms of oppression.

The VictimConnect Resource Center is a weekday phone, chat, and text-based referral helpline operated by the National Center for Victims of Crime. Services are available for all victims of crime in the United States and its territories.

If you are a victim of crime, you have many rights and services available to help you.

Newcomers Keep Coming (NKC)  is the place where newcomers, beginners, medium timers, and long timers can find the support they need to overcome addiction and join transformative AA (Alcoholic Anonymous) meetings.

Narcotics Anonymous is not meant to imply a focus on any particular drug; NA’s approach makes no distinction between drugs, including alcohol.

Co-Dependents Anonymous is a Fellowship of people whose common purpose is to develop healthy relationships. The only requirement for membership is a desire for healthy and loving relationships. 

Mind Monarch was born from surviving nearly a decade of high‑conflict divorce, coercive control, and legal abuse as a BIPOC mother fighting to protect her child and rebuild a life after isolation and manipulation. Moving through years of filings, thousands in legal fees, and a vexatious litigant on the other side revealed just how little practical, trauma‑informed support families receive in real time.

 

This practice now offers what was missing then: clear, strategic, emotionally grounded support for people navigating high‑conflict custody, court, and co‑parenting. Mind Monarch blends lived experience with professional training to help clients regulate, plan, and advocate for their children—so their lives are no longer organized around someone else’s abuse.

 

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