Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC)

I would like you to know a few things about me, Yale Lewis the person, to provide insight into my life experiences, and how those experiences shaped me as a person and counselor. 

I was born in Aspen, CO and grew up on a small ranch outside of town, where my family had horses, cattle, dogs, cats—every ranch animal from pigs to chickens. My father was a network television sports commentator who traveled worldwide and was gone more than half the year. When I was 10, my parents divorced—the most traumatic experience of my life.

At 17 USA Hockey selected me to play on a National Team in international competition.

I played Division 1 college hockey at Northeastern University in Boston, where I was a captain my junior and senior years. My sophomore season, I started experiencing back pain, which I dismissed as the result of routine contact. As I would learn later, I had genetic hyperkyphosis, a progressive spine disorder that curved my back increasingly forward. My flexibility, skating speed, and range of motion steadily decreased. My  performance declined, noticeably and steadily, despite my desperate efforts to deny the impacts of my condition.  

Though I managed to play part of a season of professional hockey in Europe, my dream of a career in the NHL crashed. And I crashed—depressed, lost, and abusing Oxycontin, which I had taken to mitigate my back pain, so I could continue to play the game I had dedicated my life to. I thought the opioids were the only way I could function without pain. I was trapped in a vicious cycle of pain - pain killer - pain - pain killer and this existence was slowly killing my personality, my character, my drive, my life. It was at this point that I had enough so I checked myself into a rehabilitation center specializing in athletes with opioid dependency addiction.

I rediscovered myself.

Counseling/therapy enabled me to figure out what direction I wanted to take my life. I chose a career as a licensed mental health counselor (LPC), to help others stuck like I was. I have made the journey I would like to guide you through, with empathy, compassion, mutual respect and trust.