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Kevin Brough , AMFT
He/Him/His

St. George, UT

Online & In-Person

Free initial consultation

Verified
Accepting new clients

About me

I am a trauma-informed therapist with over two decades of experience helping individuals, couples, and families overcome addiction, trauma, and life's most difficult challenges.

I didn't arrive at this work through a straight line. My path into the therapy room was shaped by more than two decades of working directly alongside people in some of the hardest seasons of their lives — in residential treatment centers, detox programs, behavioral health facilities, and one-on-one coaching relationships. That experience taught me things no classroom could: what it actually takes for a person to change, why insight alone is rarely enough, and why the relationship between a therapist and a client is everything.

I work with individuals, couples, and families dealing with a wide range of challenges — trauma, addiction and recovery, anxiety, depression, ADHD, grief and loss, relationship struggles, and the kind of deep, persistent feeling that something is off even when life looks fine from the outside. Whatever brings you in, my goal is the same: to help you understand yourself more clearly, shift what's been keeping you stuck, and reconnect with the person you know you're capable of being.

**My Background**

My work in behavioral health began in earnest in the early 2000s, at The Bridge Recovery Center in Rockville, Utah — a residential wellness and addiction recovery program where I helped develop a holistic approach. Over the following years, I developed and directed additional programs under Balance Health Systems, including The Retreat at Zion, a residential treatment center, and the IBH Detox Center, where I oversaw a specialized medical detox protocol we refined over a decade in collaboration with physicians, nutritionists, and complementary health practitioners. I also managed a recovery retreat center in Costa Rica for a period, and consulted on behavioral health programs across the region.

During those years, I wasn't just running programs. I was in them — developing curriculum, leading groups, designing therapeutic models, and working directly with clients who were navigating some of the most difficult experiences a person can face. I worked with individuals dealing with substance use alongside trauma, chronic health conditions, co-occurring mental health challenges, and the kind of deep pain that doesn't fit neatly into a single diagnosis.

Later, I spent several years working within adolescent residential behavioral health settings, including at Provo Canyon School (Universal Health Systems) and Cinnamon Hills Youth Crisis Center. This work deepened my understanding of how early experiences — trauma, instability, unmet needs — shape the patterns that show up in adulthood. It also reinforced something I had come to believe through years of recovery work: that most of what we struggle with as adults has roots we haven't fully examined, and that healing almost always requires going deeper than the surface behavior.

Throughout this time, I also built a parallel career in human development, coaching, and organizational training through VisionLogic, LLC, my own company focused on helping individuals and organizations make meaningful, measurable changes. I worked with business professionals, executives, couples, and individuals on leadership, self-regulation, relationships, communication, and life direction. That work sharpened my ability to meet people where they are, identify the patterns that are driving their outcomes, and help them build practical strategies for real change.

**My Training and Approach**

My formal therapeutic training is grounded in Marriage and Family Therapy, with a specialization in trauma. I completed my M.A. at National University and hold an Associate MFT license in Utah (License #14258159-3904), practicing under clinical supervision at Ascend Counseling & Wellness in St. George. I also hold a Certified Addictionologist (C.A.D.) designation, reflecting the depth of my work in substance use and recovery.

My approach draws from several evidence-based frameworks, including Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), and Internal Family Systems (IFS). I am also a certified clinical hypnotherapist, trained in both Ericksonian and Kappasinian hypnotherapy models, with hundreds of sessions conducted across my career. I hold a Master Practitioner certification in Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) and am trained in somatic and mind-body approaches that address how trauma and stress are held in the body, not just the mind.

What ties all of these tools together is a core conviction: lasting change happens simultaneously at multiple levels. We have to work with thoughts and behaviors, yes — but we also have to work with the deeper patterns, beliefs, and subconscious narratives that are running beneath the surface. That's where real transformation lives, and it's where I focus much of my energy as a clinician.

**What It's Like to Work With Me**

I am warm, direct, and genuinely curious about the people I work with. I don't sit back and stay neutral — I engage. I'll ask questions that might push into uncomfortable territory, because that's usually where the most honest and useful insight is waiting. I take your story seriously, and I'll also help you look at it from angles you may not have considered.

I bring optimism into the room — not the kind that minimizes real pain, but a grounded, experience-based belief that people are more capable of change than they usually believe when they first walk through my door. I've watched people recover from addiction after decades of trying. I've watched trauma survivors rebuild their sense of self from the ground up. I've watched couples find their way back to each other after years of distance and hurt. That history lives in how I show up with every client.

I'm also someone who has faced significant personal challenges, including a health crisis and a near-death experience that fundamentally redirected my life. I don't make sessions about my own story, but I do bring an authenticity to this work that comes from knowing what it feels like to be in a hard place — and to find a way through.

**My Practice Philosophy**

I practice within a framework I call the LifeScaping System — an integrative model I developed over two decades of clinical and coaching work. It's built around four dimensions of human experience: Mind, Heart, Body, and Spirit. The premise is simple: we are whole people, and lasting healing requires addressing the whole person. That might look different for each client — for one person it's processing trauma stored in the body; for another it's shifting the subconscious beliefs that keep sabotaging relationships; for another it's rebuilding a sense of identity after addiction has taken so much away.

Whatever the work looks like for you, I approach it collaboratively. You set the direction. I bring the tools, the experience, and the perspective to help you move. We figure out what's working and what isn't, and we adjust. Therapy with me is not passive — it's a process we're both actively engaged in.

I see clients for individual therapy, couples counseling, and family therapy. I work with adults, older adolescents, and couples at all stages — from those just beginning to recognize something needs to change, to those deep in the middle of a crisis, to those in longer-term recovery who want to go deeper into the personal growth work.

**A Few Things Worth Knowing**

My specialties include trauma and PTSD, addiction and recovery, anxiety and mood disorders, ADHD, grief and loss, life transitions, relationship and communication challenges, and identity and self-worth issues. I am particularly passionate about working with people who have tried other approaches without finding the results they were looking for — those who need something more integrative, more personalized, or more willing to go beneath the surface.

I practice in St. George, Utah, and offer both in-person and telehealth sessions. I offer a free consultation so we can get a sense of whether we're a good fit before you commit to anything.

If something on this page resonated with you, I'd love to hear from you. Reaching out is the hardest part for most people — and it's also the most important step.

License

Education

Fees and insurance

Specialties and clinical interests

Therapy types

Images and videos

Location

Ascend Trauma Counseling & Wellness

1173 South 250 West
Suite Bld 1, Ste 305
St. George, UT 84770 US

Directions

Office is ADA Accessible

Years in practice

3

Service types

  • Therapy / Counseling

Types of clients

  • Adolescents (13-17)
  • Adults (18+)
  • Older Adults (65+)
  • Individuals
  • Couples
  • Families

Languages

  • English
  • Portuguese

Website and social media

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