Tools & Support


Resources for wherever you are in your journey — whether you're in therapy with us, thinking about starting, or not quite ready yet.

You don't have to be in therapy to start taking care of yourself. This page is a running collection of what we're reading, the community organizations we want you to know about, and the tools we actually recommend — updated as we find things worth sharing. If you have questions about anything here, reach out anytime.

ATX Mental Health Recommends: Resources for You

Healing doesn't happen in isolation, and therapy is only one piece of what it takes to feel stable and whole. These are organizations we know and trust across Williamson County and the greater Austin area — covering food security, family safety, veteran support, mental health advocacy, and community care. If you or someone you know needs support beyond therapy, start here.

A note on the current landscape: Several of the national mental health organizations listed on this page — including NAMI and programs connected to SAMHSA — are navigating significant federal funding uncertainty in 2026. We've done our best to list resources that are currently operational and stable, but we recommend verifying availability directly, particularly for programs dependent on federal grants. We'll update this page as things change.

  • Find Help Now covers crisis lines, basic needs, and financial support for therapy.

  • The Inner Work is for stress, burnout, spirituality, and neurodivergence.

  • Your Brain & Body covers chronic illness and sex and sexual wellbeing.

  • Relationships & Family is for parenting, couples, and grief.

  • Community as Care covers veterans and recovery.

  • Explore & Learn is books, podcasts, and ways to follow along.

Our Bookshelf on Bookshop.org

Bookshop.org is an online bookstore built to support independent booksellers, operating as a real alternative to Amazon that puts money back into local shops. This is our curated reading list at ATX Mental Health filled with books we keep in our offices and homes. These are books we've found genuinely useful — personally and clinically — for clients doing the work, families supporting someone they love, and anyone looking for a place to start. Every purchase through our list generates income for independent bookstores, including your local one.

Podcasts We Love

Follow Along On Instagram

Resources by Topic

Crisis

If you or someone you love is in crisis right now, please reach out to one of the lines below. They're staffed around the clock, they're free, and asking for help is exactly what these lines are here for.
Call or text 988 or text ‘HOME’ to 741741

Basic Needs

Healing is harder when basic needs aren't met. Food insecurity, housing instability, no access to medical care you trust — these aren't separate from mental health. They're part of it. The resources below are for the whole picture, not just what happens in session.

Financial Support for Therapy

Cost is one of the most common reasons people put off getting support. These resources won't make therapy free, but they can make it more possible. We'd rather help you find something that works than have you go without.

Stress & Burnout

Most conversations about burnout focus on productivity hacks and time blocking. This section isn't that. These resources are about the deeper question underneath: why you're exhausted, what you're actually owed, and how to build a life that doesn't run on empty. Burnout isn't a personal failing. It's usually a structural problem, and understanding that distinction changes how you address it.

Spirituality & Faith

Spirituality means something different to everyone. It doesn't require religion, and it doesn't require certainty. Whether you're grounded in a tradition, in the middle of questioning one, rebuilding after spiritual harm, or simply trying to locate meaning in a season that's made that hard, these resources don't ask you to land anywhere in particular. They meet you where you are.

Neurodivergence

Neurodivergence is central to who we are as a practice. Whether you're newly diagnosed, supporting a child through an evaluation, or finally getting language for something you've experienced your whole life, these are the resources we point clients and families toward most often.

Sex & Pleasure

Sexual wellbeing is part of overall health, and it rarely gets the space it deserves. Whether you're navigating desire changes, healing from shame or purity culture, recovering from religious harm around sexuality, or just trying to understand your own body better, these resources treat the topic with the seriousness and warmth it deserves. There's no version of whole-person care that leaves this out. Resources in this section are intended for adults 18 and over.

Chronic Illness

Living with a chronic illness means carrying something most people around you can't see and don't fully understand. The medical system often addresses the body without touching what the body being sick actually does to a person — to their sense of self, their relationships, their ability to trust that things will be okay. These resources are for people navigating the emotional weight of long-term health conditions, not just the management of symptoms.

Parenting

Parenting is the most demanding work most people will ever do, and one of the least supported. These resources are for parents who want to understand what's actually happening inside their kids, work through their own patterns before they pass them on, and feel less alone in the daily weight of it. The work you do on yourself is part of the work you do for them.

Couples

Relationships are worth investing in before they're in crisis. The resources here are for couples and individuals who want to understand the patterns they're in, communicate more honestly, and build something more sustainable together. Not just repair what's broken.

Substance Abuse & Recovery

Recovery looks different for everyone, and where you start matters less than that you start. These resources cover different points on the spectrum, from peer support to structured recovery to resources for the people who love someone in active addiction. The family system needs support too.

Grief

Grief doesn't follow a timeline and it doesn't always look like sadness. It shows up in anger, in numbness, in the feeling that the world has kept moving and you haven't. These resources are for people navigating loss in all its forms, not just death, but the losses that don't always have names.

Veterans

Serving changes a person, and the people who love them. The resources here are for veterans, active-duty service members, and the families navigating what comes before, during, and after deployment. Getting help is not a sign that something went wrong. It's often the most direct thing a person can do.

Apps

These are apps we've found genuinely useful, not a replacement for therapy, but real support between sessions. The list is short on purpose. There's a lot of noise in the wellness app space and most of it isn't worth your time. These are the ones that have held up.

A note on apps generally
No app replaces therapy. What good apps do is reduce friction between sessions — they give you somewhere to put a feeling at 2am, a structure for a morning you can't find your footing in, or a way to practice something your therapist introduced before you can remember how to do it on your own. That's a real and meaningful function. Use them for that.

From the Blog

Looking for more? These posts go deeper on some of what you'll find on this page.

Share With Us

Know a resource that belongs on this list? We built this page to be useful, and the most useful recommendations often come from people who have actually needed them. If there's a book, app, podcast, organization, or tool that made a real difference for you, we'd love to hear about it. Use the form below to share it with us.