Groups
PEERS for Young Adults
PEERS® is a fun, research-backed program that helps teens and young adults build real friendships that last. Each week for 16 weeks, participants come together for a 90-minute group where they learn practical communication tools and get to practice them with peers in a supportive setting.
The next day, parents and caregivers join a 60-minute Zoom session where they learn simple ways to coach and encourage their teen/young adult—helping them grow their social circle, practice new skills at home, and feel more confident connecting with others.
Topics covered in the PEERS Social Skills Program, including:
Trading Information and Finding Common Interests
Starting and Maintaining Conversations
Finding a Source of Friends
Electronic Communication
Appropriate Use of Humor
Entering and Exiting Group Conversations
Get Togethers
Using Social Media
Dating Skills and Etiquette
Handling Disagreements
Handling Direct and Indirect Bullying
Application Process
Intake: $300 (covers both young adult and social coach)
PEERS® Group: $1500 (this price covers both the young adult and their social coach). The first half of the fee ($750) is due the week before the group starts. The last half ($750) is due no later than week 8.
ADHD Women in Business
Being a female entrepreneur with ADHD comes with its own brand of brilliance and chaos. You’ve got a million ideas, unstoppable creativity, and drive—but sometimes focus, organization, and follow-through can feel like the real boss you’re fighting against.
This group is a space built for us, by us—women with ADHD who are navigating the rollercoaster of running a business while juggling brains that don’t exactly follow the “traditional” playbook.
Together, we will:
Swap real strategies (not fluffy Pinterest hacks) for running businesses that work with our ADHD brains.
Share the struggles openly—because executive dysfunction, burnout, and rejection sensitivity are real.
Celebrate the wins, big or small, because success doesn’t look the same for everyone.
Build a network of ADHD entrepreneurs who get it—no judgment, just support, humor, and honesty.
This isn’t about “fixing” ADHD—it’s about owning it, leaning into our strengths, and finding community with other women who are building businesses on their own terms.