Building Lives Worth Living through Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)

When emotions feel impossible, we help teens and young adults find stability, self-respect and hope — and help families learn how to support without rescuing.

What We Do

Evil Plan Productions provides Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) for adolescents and emerging adults (ages 12 - 25) who struggle with severe emotion dysregulation, suicidal thoughts or behaviors, or self-harming thoughts or behaviors. We specialize in clients who have tried traditional therapy without making the progress they need.

DBT isn’t 'just talking.' It’s a structured, evidence-based treatment built around skills, accountability, and support.

Our clients learn to:

  • Regulate overwhelming emotions

  • Reduce impulsive and self-destructive behaviors

  • Build meaningful relationships

  • Create lives they actually want to live

Treatment includes weekly individual therapy, skills training, phone coaching, and team consultation for your therapist - all grounded in DBT’s proven structure.

Who We Serve

  • Adolescents and young adults ages 12 - 25

  • Families ready to commit to a structured, skills-based treatment model

  • Clients with chronic emotion dysregulation, self-harm, or suicidal behaviors

What You Can Expect

You’ll get a therapist who shows up - consistently, skillfully, and with compassion. You’ll be challenged, supported, and held accountable. Over time, you’ll gain tools to move from chaos to calm, from crisis to connection, and from surviving to living.

Learn more about DBT

Why an Evil Plan?

We believe in collaboration, irreverence, and doing hard things on purpose.

Parenting is hard, kids aren’t broken, and everyone can learn to do a little better. We believe in the power of mindfulness, figuring things out instead of judging and blaming, and everyone is doing the best they can.

It’s an evil plan because we’re going to be partners and co-conspirators in this process, because heroes can be reactive, and we would prefer to be actionable instead of aspirational.

Everyone wants something better – connection, contentment, a sense of worth and purpose. What are we going to do?