Dr. Hilary Towers is a licensed professional counselor (LPC) at Revelations Counseling and Consulting. She earned her Master of Science (M.S.) in Clinical Mental Health Counseling from Divine Mercy University, and her Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology at The George Washington University's Center for Family Research in Washington D.C. Hilary worked as a graduate teaching assistant in the Department of Psychology at George Washington University and served as project coordinator and research assistant, respectively, for two large behavioral genetic studies examining genetic and environmental influences on individual adjustment factors and relationships.
A non-resident scholar at Baylor University’s Institute for Studies of Religion (ISR), Hilary’s work in behavioral genetics appears in a variety of academic journals and books, including Marriage and Family Review, International Journal of Behavioral Development, and Journal of Family Psychology. Her work on the subjects of marriage and divorce has also been published in an array of online journals, including: Public Discourse, Crux, CatholicVote, National Catholic Register, Ethika Politika, Institute for Family Studies, First Things, and National Review Online.
Hilary has been a guest speaker at the Catholic Women’s Symposium and invited to speak in media, workshops, and conferences on topics such as: “Cultivating Marital Commitment to Reduce Poverty”; “Commitment as an Antidote to ‘Moving On:’ The Role of Millennials in Reviving Lifelong, Faithful Marriage”; “Reviving Marriage: The Commitment Factor”; and “Marriage-Centered Communities: How to Build a Marriage Ministry in Your Parish”.
Hilary completed her counseling internship at Associated Clinical Services in Springfield, Virginia, and her residency at Revelations in Stafford, Virginia. She is experienced in counseling adolescents, adults, and couples. Her clinical interests include premarital counseling, marital counseling, trauma-related care, depression, anxiety, and spousal abandonment. Hilary’s primary treatment approaches are attachment-oriented, cognitive-behavioral, and existential, and she is trained to allow for the optional integration of spiritual considerations into her therapeutic approach. She is working toward certification in logotherapy, a clinical approach developed by psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor Viktor Frankl. Hilary has advanced training in Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT), an evidence-based treatment of PTSD, and in Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), which she employs in her work with couples. She is a certified facilitator of the Prepare/Enrich program, an evidence-based approach to marital preparation and enrichment.
The mother of five children, Hilary and her family reside in Northern Virginia.
I am a Certified EFT Therapist and ICEEFT approved Supervisor Candidate trained to work with adults via individual and couples therapy. I am licensed in Texas and Nebraska, as well as certified to provide teletherapy to all PSYPACT affiliated states (https://psypact.org/mpage/psypactmap). I love what I do, which is fueled by my passion for accompanying my clients through the sadness and fears of confronting unprocessed pain, the excitement of progressing in small and big ways, and the feeling of victory at the end of treatment. It is an honor to be a part of this process and to share the sacred ground where healing can occur.
Dr. Sue Baars has worked extensively in the field of counseling since 1986 in both hospital and outpatient settings. She provides individual, marriage, and family therapy in Irving, Texas, where she is privileged to collaborate with a team of Catholic therapists and psychiatric nurse practitioners at In His Image Counseling Center. Sue bases her treatment of emotional and spiritual problems on the integration of the Christian anthropology of St. Thomas Aquinas with modern psychological discoveries. She has presented at Catholic conferences around the country and has been a guest on EWTN’s Women of Grace. She often presents the work of her late father, psychiatrist and author Conrad Baars, a pioneer in the field of Catholic psychology. Sue cites the cultural erosion of the family as the root of the lack of affirmation from which many people in our time suffer.
Sue’s lectures include a series of talks given to priests: The Abode of Love: Developing the Heart. She and a colleague edited a collection of her father’s articles and monographs related to the priesthood entitled, “I Will Give Them a New Heart: Reflections on the Priesthood and the Renewal of the Church.” Sue was on the faculty of the Institute for Priestly Formation (IPF) from 2008 to 2015, where she taught diocesan seminarians. Sue has also written several book chapters on priestly formation. At present, she is working on developing a curriculum to train therapists in the Baars/Terruwe Model of psychotherapy. Sue is a Past President of the Catholic Psychotherapy Association and holds a doctorate in Family Therapy from Texas Woman’s University.
Information about Affirmation therapy and the Baars/Terruwe Model of psychotherapy may be found at www.BaarsInstitute.com. For appointments, please visit ihicounseling.com.