Tree of Life Counseling

Tree of Life Counseling Client-centered individual and couple counseling to support growth, healing, and spiritual direction through struggles in life, love, and relationships

Julie Kautz is a registered psychotherapist with the state of Colorado. After many years in pastoral care, she received her Master of Arts in Counseling from Colorado Christian University. Julie’s approach to therapy is client-centered, client directed, using predominantly cognitive behavioral and gestalt techniques to reach the client’s goals for growth and change. She particularly enjoys working

with couples. She is a certified Prepare/Enrich facilitator.
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Julie provides support and counseling for:

Premarital and marital counseling, offering the Prepare/Enrich curriculum
Parenting issues
Divorce recovery
Anxiety/depression
Life transitions and adjustments
Sexuality
Unwanted same s*x attractions
Grief and loss
Crisis and trauma
Christian counseling


MORE ABOUT ME
I bring to the counseling room life experience that I never thought I would have. Divorce, grief and chronic illness have given me perspective and compassion that led to career change into professional counseling. Personal counseling has benefited me through my own life challenges, yet I learned things not taught in school as well, and I set a goal to be a better counselor than the best counselor I had. I see marriage as the heart of our culture. If our families fail, the society fails. As a former pastor’s wife, I have a heart for hurting clergy and their families. I focus on the whole person, mind, body and spirit, to bring wholeness through the struggles. No problem is too small or too big if it is interfering with enjoying life to the fullest.

01/07/2024

Julie is retired and has moved to North Carolina near family. So thank you for following this page. Serving the Aurora area has been a blessing and pleasure!
I cannot find a place to close the page so maybe FB will do it for me??

09/19/2021

❤️

09/18/2021

I know this is a longer message - but I think this will speak to your heart ❤

09/17/2021

There's a reason why parents of big kids shut down when their kids hit the teenage years.

There's a reason why moms stop talking to other parents at pick up lines and dads avoid people at all cost

You know that phrase little kids, little problems. Big kids, bigger problems? It is so true.

And if you are lucky enough to raise a teenager that never drank or smoked or did drugs, if you are lucky enough to have a child that never got arrested for a misdemeanor or snuck out or cheated on a test, if you are lucky enough never to feel like you were just a complete and utter failure as a parent because of the behavior of your kid despite your best efforts, consider it just that: lucky.

Because for most big kids who do something bad, it is usually not from bad parenting as much as the teen making a bad decision.

And we need to sit on that for a second.

Before we rush to judgment. Before we roll our eyes and start mentioning all the things we think those parents did wrong. Before we fill ourselves with righteous indignation.

We need to remember that it could be our kid, and how do we want people to treat us.

Sure, we need to be conscientious parents and raise our kids to the best of our abilities. But unless you have severely neglected, abused, or traumatized your child, we need to recognize that sometimes teenagers lose their way despite our best efforts.

Addiction can be genetic. Violence could be linked to a traumatic event not related to the parents. Stealing could be attention seeking behavior. Lying is testing boundaries.

But also, teenagers have been found to be poor decision-makers if they feel pressured, stressed or are seeking attention from peers, so while with one friend a teen may say no to alcohol, at a party with peers they want to impress, they may engage in binge drinking in a spur-of-the-moment request.

Rather than blaming the parents, we need to rally around families who need support instead of pushing them further under water.

I still believe as parents we are the number one role models for our kids. I still believe that we can arm our children with information and boundaries so they grow up into productive adults.

But I also believe that most of us are trying our best and parent with the best of intentions.

I speak from experience. Sometime good kids just make bad decisions. Sometimes good kids have addictions. Sometimes good kids are hurting and don't know how to express it. Sometimes good kids cave under pressure. Sometimes good kids want to impress their peers so they do something bad.

And oftentimes these good kids come from good parents.

There is enough guilt when it comes to parenting. Did I do too much for them? Not enough? Did I give them too much freedom? Was I too overbearing? Many parents spend the rest of their lives wondering where they went wrong when raising their kids.

So, the next time your local rumor mill starts running with the bad behavior of a child coming from a "good" family, maybe resist the urge to spread the gossip to another friend.

Instead, maybe use it as a discussion springboard with your own child.

And if you are feeling extra generous, reach out to that parent who is most likely beating themselves up for their child's behavior, the one who feels isolated, the one who is staying up all night examining every parenting decision she ever made.

They could use some support, too.

09/07/2021

Address

2821 S Parker Road
Aurora, CO
80014

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm
Saturday 8am - 6pm
Sunday 8am - 8pm

Telephone

+19705187326

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