what if you could stop trying so hard and just be?

welcome to

Home Is Where The Art Is

Art therapist Becca Meyers, with colorful hair, glasses, and a green sweater,leaning on the back of an orange chair with a crochet tapestry behind her

Hi, I’m Becca!

I'm a neurodivergent, LGBTQIA+ art therapist and licensed counselor offering in-person sessions in Westminster, CO. If you’re tired of constantly overthinking and taking care of everyone else, take a breath. I see you, and I get it. I’m here to provide a nonjudgmental therapeutic space where you can learn to let yourself be imperfect, prioritize your emotional needs, and grow to trust yourself. I hope to help you feel more at home in who you truly are and remember that you are worth it.

Let's get started

you don’t have to have it all together.

Person with long grey and silver hair tied back, with their fingers and thumb on their temples, wearing a black sweatshirt

if this feels true for you…

  • you feel like you’re never doing enough, no matter how much you accomplish

  • you minimize your struggles because "other people have it worse"

  • you've been told you're "so strong," but that feels more like pressure than praise

  • you're exhausted from masking everywhere—at work, at home, in every relationship

  • you’re burnt out and frequently cancel plans because being "on" one more time feels impossible

  • your body is telling you something's wrong—the tightness in your chest, the lump in your throat, the exhaustion that sleep doesn't fix, that constant frantic buzz

  • you feel like a fraud sometimes (okay, maybe a lot more than sometimes), waiting for someone to figure out you don't know what you’re doing

  • the bar you've set for yourself feels impossibly high and it’s getting harder and harder to keep up

  • you've spent so long taking care of everyone else, you're not sure what you actually need

  • the to-do lists, self-help books, and trying harder haven't quieted that inner critic voice

…there’s another way.

A collection of used paintbrushes with paint on bristles and handles, resting on a surface, with a blurred background.

art therapy: a language of the inner world

Art therapy isn't about making "good" art or being talented. It's about giving your inner experience a voice when words just aren't enough. Through color, texture, image, and metaphor, we'll explore what's beneath the surface—the feelings you've pushed down, the needs you've ignored, the parts of yourself you've been afraid to acknowledge.

Sometimes the healing happens in the making itself—the soothing rhythm of your hand moving across paper, the release that comes from externalizing what's been held inside. Other times, we'll use what you've created as a starting point for deeper exploration, unpacking what we see together. The art becomes a bridge to patterns, emotions, and truths that talk therapy alone might miss.

Person's hand using oil pastels and drawing on a grey tabletop

what clients have shared

With their permission, here’s what some clients have shared after working together:

"I feel the most myself I've ever felt."

“I trust myself and my body’s wisdom now”

"You've helped me develop a language with myself."

"I finally feel at home in who I am."

This is an explicitly LGBTQIA+-affirming practice. Though I bring lived experience to this work, that doesn't mean I understand your specific experience. You are the expert on your own life and identity.

What I can offer is a space where you don't need to explain the basics, justify your existence, or translate your experience into language that makes others comfortable. Your pronouns, your identity, your journey—all of it, all of YOU, belongs here.

a note on safety & belonging at Home Is Where The Art Is

A rainbow pride flag flying against a clear blue sky.

ready to get started?

If you're tired of feeling disconnected from yourself and you’re ready to have more support, I'd be honored to walk alongside you. Reach out for a free consultation, and let's talk about what working together could look like.

You don't have to keep carrying this alone.

reach out
Accordian-style booklet filled with hand-drawn rainbow colors in horizontal lines, and torn paper across the bottom, featuring the handwritten message 'don't ignore the calling'.