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Men's Mental Health · Individual Therapy

You already know
something needs
to change.

Most men who end up in therapy waited longer than they needed to. Not because they didn't know something was wrong — but because asking for help felt like admitting defeat. Like the thing they'd been taught their whole life not to do.

This is a space for men who are done white-knuckling it alone. Who are tired of managing everything internally. Who want to actually work on something instead of just surviving it. That's what I'm here for.

Start the Conversation → What this looks like
The Reality

Why men often wait —
and what it costs

Men are taught early that emotional needs are a liability. That the right response to struggle is to push through, stay quiet, and handle it. That reaching out signals weakness. Those lessons run deep, and they're hard to unlearn.

But carrying everything alone has a cost. It shows up in how you treat people you care about. In the sleep you're not getting. In the distance that's grown between you and your own life. Therapy doesn't fix all of that immediately — but it's where the work actually starts.

No judgment about how long you waited. There's no penalty for getting here late. What matters is that you're here.

Direct conversation. We talk about what's actually going on, not around it. No forced vulnerability, no homework you'll ignore.

You don't have to have it figured out. You don't need to know exactly what you want to work on. Showing up is enough to start.

Flexible access. In-person in Atlanta or online — whichever makes it easier for you to actually do this.

What Men Work On

What comes up most often
for men in therapy

Not an exhaustive list — but the things that show up most consistently.

Anger & Frustration

Often the one emotion that felt acceptable. We work on what's underneath it.

Relationship Problems

Patterns that keep repeating. Distance that keeps growing. Things left unsaid for too long.

Anxiety & Stress

Especially the kind that never fully turns off — work, responsibility, the future.

Depression

Showing up as flatness, irritability, or just going through the motions more than actual sadness.

Identity & Direction

Who you want to be, what actually matters, what you've been doing on autopilot.

Major Life Changes

Divorce, fatherhood, career shifts, loss — transitions that hit harder than expected.

"You're not hard to help.
You just haven't found
the right fit."
— Myke Cooper, LCSW
Atlanta, GA · Online Across Six States

Ready to stop
managing alone?

In-person in Atlanta. Online across Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, New York, Colorado, and Nevada.

Get in Touch →