all
souls: filling a void
by lisa horak
On
a small side street minutes from downtown Asheville stands a
gray and white Victorian house. Its front porch is wide and
broad, and a wooden swing beckons invitingly. The inside is
equally charming. Rich hardwood floors shine and a broad staircase
leads to six cozy rooms that offer comfortable chairs and fireplaces.
Sunlight pours in through wide windows. This is a place where
people instantly feel at home. This is a place where people
feel comfortable and can reveal their pain.
At
a glance, this could be one of Ashevilles many bed &
breakfasts. But it is not. This is the All Souls Counseling
Center which provides affordable mental health care to individuals,
families, and couples. All Souls was formed in May 2000 to meet
the needs of people without health insurance or who are underinsured,
meaning that their mental health benefits do not kick in until
an exorbitant deductible is met. Many who come pay just five
dollars for their sessions; others pay merely what they scrounge
from their pockets. Everyone is encouraged to pay something,
however nominal it may be.
All
Souls Counseling Center, located at 33 Orange Street, was the
creation of Drs. Stephanie Citron and Michael Penland, two clinical
psychologists who were parishioners at The Cathedral of All
Souls. Both were dismayed by the closure in the late 1990s of
two mental health facilities: the Family Services Center and
Charter Asheville. The only other mental health care option
in the area was Blue Ridge Mental Health Center, which due to
diminished funding was able to offer less and less outpatient
services for individual psychotherapy.
Penland,
who has since joined the seminary to become a priest, was moved
to create a way to benefit the community while furthering the
ministry of the church. Penland and Citron talked to Rev. Todd
Donatelli, rector at All Souls, about combining their professional
abilities with their desire to fill Ashevilles mental
health care void. They decided to form a site-based center modeled
after the St. Lukes Training and Counseling Center in
Atlanta, where Citron had previously worked.
In
early 2000, they formed a non-profit organization and created
a board. They crafted a mission aimed at providing quality outpatient
psychotherapy to people of all faiths, and developed a sliding
fee scale to accommodate anyone seeking therapy, regardless
of their financial status or whether they had health insurance.
All Souls Counseling Center provides financially accessible
mental health services to people who can benefit from counseling
but whose lives are in enough control that they can function
in society and do not require hospitalization. The board further
defined the Centers mission by what it could not provide:
psychological evaluations, crisis intervention, case management,
24-hour coverage, or services to anyone wishing to use their
health insurance.
By
October 2000, Citron and Penland began seeing clients at the
offices at All Souls Church. The word spread quickly. The response
was so overwhelming that Citron and Penland quickly enlisted
some of their colleagues to lend a hand.
There
is a lot of passion around the Center, says Citron. We
all know someone or have ourselves been in a tough, dark place
before. I meet a lot of folks who cant afford individual
therapy. Now we have a place we can refer them to. All Souls
offers a safety neta way to help people before a situation
becomes a crisis.
Citron,
53, has been in private practice as a clinical psychologist
for 25 years, and has worked in Asheville for the last 14 years.
In addition, she teaches behavioral medecine to OB/GYN residents
at MAHEC. She has been amazed by both the growth and the tremendous
enthusiasm for All Souls Counseling Center. Today 20 part-time
therapists and 2 clinical psychologists see more than 400 clients
a month. Most of the therapists volunteer between 5 and 15 hours
a week at All Souls.
In
addition, the philanthropic community has been eager to help.
The Center has received grants from the Community Foundation
of Western North Carolina, Mission/St. Josephs Foundation,
United Way, and most recently the Kate B. Reynolds Foundation.
These grants allowed the All Souls to hire an Executive Director,
Sue Brooks, in June 2001, along with a full-time administrative
assistant. A further measure of success is that the Center,
which has been in its Orange Street location for a year, may
soon need a larger space to meet the burgeoning client demand.
Executive
Director Brooks credits Citron and Margaret McKeel, the organizations
first board chairman and current board member, with the Centers
success. While Citron is the guru on the counseling front, McKeel
is her counterpart on the administrative end. McKeel, 67, was
a registered nurse with Ashevilles St. Josephs Hospital
for 13 years, and for two more once it merged with Mission.
She was also a Vice President of Surgery, clearly having what
it takes to juggle patient needs, medical scheduling, and working
with a multitude of personalities. Furthermore, she has been
a nurse with Church of the Advocate, a program of All Souls
Cathedral that ministers to homeless people.
Margaret
has such compassion and works tirelessly to make sure things
run smoothly, says Brooks. We have to keep reminding
her that she is retired.
My
work with the counseling center is the most rewarding thing
I have ever done, says McKeel. Im so impressed
by how generous the therapists are with both their time and
their services. They are experienced, licensed professionals
who could easily be making four times what they are paid at
All Souls. Most are in private practice but work part time at
All Souls at discounted fees as a way to give back to the community.
This
generosity has impressed Citron too. Creating All Souls
was like ripe fruit falling off the tree. It was so easy to
find therapists who wanted to be a part of this. Even the funding
has fallen into place. We have received nearly every grant that
we have applied for. We have a dedicated, talented board of
directors. And we know we are helping people who otherwise couldnt
afford high-quality mental health care.
Brooks
agrees. We want our clients to know that we care about
them. This is a wonderful, nurturing place that reflects the
spirit of those who give so much to it. If people are comfortable
here and we can help them deal with their troubles, then we
are truly helping our whole society.
And
so people come. They curl up on couches and talk to caring mental
health professionals about their problems. They pay what they
can. They are treated with dignity. They heal. They are grateful.
They move on.
Lisa
Horak is a stay at home mom raising two young daughters,
Molly and Isabel. She has written for non-profit organizations
and is the co-editor of Heart of the Land and Off the Beaten
Path, a ficton and non-fiction anthology of nature writing for
The Nature Conservancy. She recently moved to Asheville from
Washington, D.C., and is currently working on her first childrens
book.