
Hello! I’m Michelle John
I am a licensed professional counselor-supervisor (LPC-S) in Texas. Practicing since 1996, I’m influenced by several schools of psychotherapy, art therapy, and somatic practices (bodywork), all of which help me understand your body, injuries, emotional life, relationships, and personal dynamics as part of your healing process. My areas of expertise include: Anxiety and stress related problems, trauma/ptsd issues, depression and mood/emotional dysregulation, relationship problems and life transitions. There are times that incorporating psychotherapy, bodywork, and creative modalities might be helpful. I am honored to be joining you on your psychotherapeutic journey of integration and self-awareness.
In my practice, mojo is your energy, your life force, your ego and how you define yourself.

mo·jo
n. /mō-jō/
The word mojo conjures up images of ceremony, ritual and magic. In my practice, mojo is your energy, your life force, your ego and how you define yourself. And, your mojo can become stuck, out of its flow state, heavily guarded, defended and blocked. To gain access to that authentic, innermost knowing, positive flow, integrated Self that’s most definitely in there, we need to get your mojo working for you, not against you. That’s where I come in.
Featured Blog Entries
Kilimanjaro
On January 8, 2020 I arrived at the Kilimanjaro International Airport a little weary from travelling from Austin, Texas. I would be taking the 8-day Lemosho Route through 5 climate zones to the top at 19,341 feet (The Rooftop of Africa and considered to be the easiest of the seven great summits created by three volcanic dormant cones).
A Southern Soul Journey
Michelle John, a native Of Monroe, is a mixed media artist currently living in Austin, Texas. She is also a licensed psychotherapist who never stays in one place for too long. She is not afraid of chance, change or circumstance.
Thoughts on Friendship
A couple of weeks ago, I came across a picture of these two little girls in Halloween costumes… couldn’t be more than 4 years old. One dressed as a black cat and the other dressed as a clown.