Faith communities
Churches, mosques, and faith-based fellowships supporting members through life challenges.
We partner with churches, mosques, NGOs, alumni networks, and online communities to make Nigerian mental health support accessible, affordable, and free of stigma — co-designed for your members, on your terms.

From a single WhatsApp prayer group to an alumni network of thousands — if there's a group of people who trust each other, we can support them together.
Churches, mosques, and faith-based fellowships supporting members through life challenges.
Mental health, women's rights, youth empowerment, and SGBV-focused organizations.
School and university alumni associations investing in their members long after graduation.
Creators, Discord servers, Twitter circles, and Substack newsletters with engaged audiences.
Estate and residents associations creating safer, more supportive living environments.
Peer-led groups for grief, addiction, parenting, chronic illness, and more.
Therapists are scarce, public services are stretched, and stigma keeps people from walking into an office. So Nigerians turn to family, pastors, imams, friends, and group chats first. Communities are already doing the work — we make sure they have what they need to do it well.
Nigerian adults experience a mental health condition in a given year.
The approximate ratio of mental health professionals to the Nigerian population.
...of Nigerians who need mental health care never receive it through formal channels.
Most partnerships combine two or three of these. We'll recommend the right starting point on our first call.
Curated wellness workshops — stress, parenting, grief, leadership burnout — delivered live or pre-recorded for your community.
Equip community leaders with the skills to recognize early warning signs, listen well, and refer when things go beyond their depth.
Members get access to 1:1 sessions with licensed therapists at community-only rates we co-design with you.
A dedicated line your members can call when they need support outside of scheduled sessions. Real humans, fast.
Trained facilitators run private peer-support circles for your members on topics that matter to them.
Members get fully private sessions. You get anonymized usage trends — never names, never details.
Composite stories drawn from real partnerships, with names and details changed to protect privacy.
A Lagos-based parish noticed members carrying heavy burdens after Sunday service. They partnered with us to run monthly stress and grief workshops, then quietly added subsidized 1:1 sessions for members who needed deeper help. Stigma dropped fast once the senior pastor said the words out loud: 'It's okay to need help.'
A Kano-based NGO supporting survivors of gender-based violence needed mental health backup for their staff and the women they served. We trained 22 frontline workers in trauma-informed care and set up an on-call line for survivors. Staff retention went up; survivor follow-through doubled.
Most communities go from first call to first workshop in two weeks. No proposals you need a lawyer to read.
A 30-minute call with your community's leadership team. We learn what your members carry, what they need, and what you've already tried.
We co-design the right mix — workshops, peer groups, 1:1 sessions, leader training — and propose a sliding-scale partnership that fits your funding reality.
We onboard members gently, brief leaders, and start delivering. You get monthly check-ins and anonymized usage reports so you see the impact.
No. We work with communities of 20 members and up. The smaller you are, the more flexible we can be on format and price.
Pricing is co-designed. Many partnerships are grant-funded, sliding-scale, or sponsored by community leadership. Some communities pay nothing — we'll talk you through what's possible.
Yes. Our therapists are Nigerian, trained in culturally sensitive care, and we don't impose. If your community has specific values around faith, gender, or language, we match members with therapists who respect that.
Always. Members’ sessions are confidential between them and their therapist. You see anonymized trends (how many sessions, what topics) — never names, never details.
We currently support sessions in English, Pidgin, Yoruba, Igbo, and Hausa. Tell us what your community needs.
Our crisis warm-line is staffed by trained mental health workers and is included in every partnership. Members in immediate danger are connected to local emergency services.
Start with a 30-minute conversation. No pitch, no pressure — just listening. If we're a fit, we'll design something honest together.