Psychologist Care for Anxiety, Depression, and Trauma Concerns
There is a particular kind of exhaustion that comes from trying to look fine while carrying anxiety, depression, or trauma inside your body every day. People often describe it as being “high-functioning” from the outside and barely holding together on the inside. They answer emails, get children to school, show up for appointments, smile at the right moments, and then collapse in private. Sometimes the collapse looks like tears. Sometimes it looks like numbness. Sometimes it looks like irritability, overeating, scrolling for hours, drinking more than intended, or lying awake at 2:17 a.m. Rehearsing every possible thing that could go wrong.
Psychologist care can offer a steady place to bring all of that. Not a place where you have to perform wellness. Not a place where you have to justify why you feel the way you do. A good mental health service gives you room to slow down, name what is happening, understand the patterns underneath it, and practice different ways of responding.
Anxiety therapy, depression therapy, and trauma therapy are not one-size-fits-all services. They overlap, because human beings are not divided into neat categories. A person may come in for panic attacks and eventually realize those attacks intensified after a loss. Another may seek help for depression and discover that years of chronic stress have left their nervous system depleted. Someone else may start trauma therapy after a specific event, while another carries the quieter wounds of repeated invalidation, instability, or fear.
The role of a psychologist is to help make sense of these experiences with care, training, and clinical judgment. A psychologist is typically a doctoral-level mental health professional, often trained through a PhD, PsyD, or EdD pathway. Psychologists may provide psychological counseling and other mental health services, and their work can also include assessment, research, and teaching. They are not medical doctors, and they do not occupy the same role as psychiatrists. Still, within psychotherapy, psychologists are among the licensed professionals who can evaluate and treat mental health concerns such as anxiety, depression, and trauma-related distress.
That distinction matters, not because titles should feel intimidating, but because people deserve to know who is sitting across from them.
When anxiety stops being “just stress”
Anxiety is often dismissed for too long. Many people tell themselves they are simply busy, sensitive, tired, or “bad at relaxing.” They may be praised for being prepared, responsible, organized, or thoughtful, while privately their mind is running threat calculations all day.
Healthy concern helps us respond to life. It reminds us to study before an exam, save money for a bill, leave early for an appointment, or repair a strained relationship. Anxiety becomes more concerning when the alarm system does not shut off, or when it fires in situations that are not truly dangerous. The body may behave as if danger is present even when a person is sitting at a desk, driving to the grocery store, reading a text message, or trying to fall asleep.
In therapy, people often describe anxiety in concrete, physical terms before they describe it emotionally. Tight chest. Restless legs. Shallow breathing. Stomach problems. Jaw pain. Headaches. A sudden need to escape. Others notice the mental loops first: What if I fail? What if they leave? What if something is wrong with my health? What if I said the wrong thing? What if I cannot handle what comes next?
Anxiety therapy begins by taking those experiences seriously without treating every anxious thought as truth. That balance is important. If therapy only reassures, it may soothe for a moment without changing the pattern. If therapy challenges too quickly, it can feel dismissive. Skilled care usually works somewhere in the middle, helping a person understand the body’s fear response, identify triggers, notice avoidance, and gradually build tolerance for uncertainty.
Evidence-based psychotherapies can reduce symptoms of anxiety and other mental health conditions. Exposure therapy, a form of cognitive behavioral therapy, is one approach used for anxiety disorders. Exposure does not mean forcing someone recklessly into distress. Done well, it is careful, collaborative, and paced. A person learns, through experience rather than argument, that feared sensations, memories, places, or situations can be approached safely enough and survived.
For one person, that may mean learning to ride out the sensations of panic without fleeing. For another, it may mean practicing a difficult conversation instead of avoiding it for weeks. For someone whose world has narrowed because of anxiety, treatment may involve slowly reclaiming ordinary life: driving farther from home, attending a gathering, sleeping without repeated checking, opening mail, or making a medical appointment that has been avoided for months.
The goal is not to become fearless. Fear is part of being human. The goal is to stop letting anxiety make every important decision.
Depression is not a character flaw
Depression can be cruel in part because it changes how people interpret themselves. A depressed person may not simply think, “I am having symptoms.” They may think, “I am lazy,” “I am failing,” “I am a burden,” or “I have always been this way and nothing will help.” Depression narrows the future until it feels like the present pain has no edge.
The outside world may not recognize it. Some people with depression cry often and cannot get out of bed. Others go to work every day and speak in meetings, then come home and feel nothing. Some sleep constantly. Some wake before dawn with a heavy dread. Appetite may vanish or increase. Small tasks may feel strangely complex. A sink full of dishes can feel like evidence of moral collapse. A missed call can feel impossible to return.
Depression therapy gives language to this flattening and heaviness. It also helps separate the person from the depressive story. That separation can be the first small opening. Instead of “I am hopeless,” therapy may help someone say, “Depression is telling me there is no point.” That may sound minor, but clinically and emotionally it can matter. It creates enough distance to question the thought, test it, and respond differently.
Evidence-based psychotherapy can reduce symptoms of depression. In practice, depression therapy often involves attention to thoughts, behavior, relationships, grief, identity, and the body. Some sessions may focus on the beliefs that keep a person stuck. Others may focus on the daily rhythms that support recovery: sleep, movement, meals, social contact, meaningful activity, and reduced isolation. None of these are magic fixes. They are not substitutes for compassion. But depression often worsens when life shrinks, and therapy can help a person rebuild life in manageable pieces.
There is a delicate trade-off here. Push too hard, and the person feels shamed. Move too passively, and depression keeps taking ground. Good therapy respects the weight of depression while still looking for small acts of agency. That might mean opening the blinds before noon three days this week. It might mean texting one trusted person instead of disappearing. It might mean returning to a hobby for ten minutes, not because joy is guaranteed, but because depression should not get the final vote on every action.
A psychologist may also help assess when additional support is needed. Because psychologists are not medical doctors, medication decisions are typically handled by prescribers such as physicians or psychiatrists. But psychotherapy can still be central, whether someone uses medication, does not use medication, is considering it, or has questions about what level of care fits their needs.
Trauma lives in memory, body, and meaning
Trauma is not only an event. It is also what happens inside a person after an experience overwhelms their capacity to cope. Two people can go through similar events and respond differently. That does not mean one is stronger. It means nervous systems, histories, relationships, resources, and meanings all matter.
Traumatic stress and PTSD are major areas of psychological care. Trauma concerns may follow experiences that are sudden and terrifying, such as assault, accidents, violence, medical crises, or disasters. They may also follow repeated exposure to fear, instability, coercion, humiliation, or violation. Some people know exactly what event changed them. Others arrive in therapy with fragments: a body that startles easily, difficulty trusting, nightmares, shutdown during conflict, shame that feels older than the current situation.

Trauma therapy requires patience. Many people fear that therapy will mean retelling painful memories in detail before they are ready. Responsible trauma care does not treat disclosure as a test of seriousness. Safety, stabilization, consent, and pacing matter. A psychologist working with trauma concerns should be attentive not only to what happened, but to how the person is functioning now. Are they sleeping? Are they dissociating? Do they have support? Are they safe in their current environment? Can they stay present during difficult emotions, or do they become overwhelmed quickly?
The work may include understanding trauma responses such as fight, flight, freeze, or shutdown. It may involve noticing triggers and learning grounding skills. It may include processing memories, grief, anger, or self-blame. It often involves rebuilding trust in one’s own perceptions. Many trauma survivors have spent years minimizing what happened or blaming themselves for reactions that were, at the time, attempts to survive.

A person might say, “I do not know why I froze.” Therapy may help them understand that freezing can be an involuntary survival response, not a choice. Another might say, “I should be over it by now.” Therapy may gently challenge the assumption that healing follows a tidy calendar. Trauma recovery often moves unevenly. A person can make real progress and still have a hard week near an anniversary, after a conflict, during a medical procedure, or when exposed to a reminder they did not expect.
Trauma therapy is not about erasing the past. It is about reducing the past’s power to hijack the present.
The psychologist’s role in mental health care
A psychologist brings advanced training in human behavior, emotion, cognition, development, assessment, and psychotherapy. In many places, licensure is regulated by state psychology boards or similar bodies designed to safeguard public welfare. Requirements vary by jurisdiction, but psychologist licensure commonly involves doctoral-level training and supervised clinical experience.
That training does not make a psychologist a perfect fit for every person. The relationship still matters. Therapy is both professional and deeply human. You can have a highly qualified clinician and still need to ask whether you feel respected, understood, and appropriately challenged. You can also need a particular area of expertise, such as trauma therapy, anxiety therapy, depression therapy, or therapy for women, depending on your concerns and life context.
Psychotherapy itself may be provided by several types of trained, licensed professionals, including clinical psychologists, psychiatrists, counselors, social workers, and psychiatric nurses. This is useful to know because people sometimes assume there is only one correct doorway into care. There are multiple legitimate doors. The best one depends on need, availability, fit, training, and sometimes practical realities such as insurance, location, telehealth access, or scheduling.
A psychologist may be especially helpful when someone wants a careful clinical formulation, not just coping tips. Formulation means looking at the whole pattern: symptoms, history, relationships, protective factors, avoidance loops, beliefs, triggers, culture, identity, and goals. For example, panic attacks may not only be panic attacks. They may be connected to grief, perfectionism, medical fears, trauma reminders, or chronic overextension. Depression may not only be low mood. It may be tied to burnout, loss, isolation, hormonal transitions, relational strain, or old beliefs about worth. A psychologist’s job is not to jump to a simplistic answer, but to help build a working map.
That map should change as therapy deepens. Good care leaves room for new information.
Therapy for women: not a separate license, but often a meaningful focus
Therapy for women is not a separate license category. A psychologist does not become a different kind of licensed professional by working with women’s concerns. Still, the phrase can matter because many women seek therapy in the context of pressures and experiences that deserve specific attention.
Women may come to therapy while navigating caregiving, fertility concerns, pregnancy or postpartum changes, relationship stress, workplace strain, trauma history, body image concerns, grief, identity transitions, or the emotional labor of being responsible for everyone else’s needs. Not all women share the same experiences, and therapy should never flatten womanhood into stereotypes. A young professional managing panic before presentations needs something different from a mother who feels invisible, a survivor of violence, a woman grieving a miscarriage, or someone questioning whether her life still fits her.
The common thread is that therapy should make room for context. Symptoms do not occur in a vacuum. Anxiety may be intensified by constant caretaking. Depression may deepen when a person has no space for rest or desire. Trauma may be complicated by the ways women are sometimes pressured to minimize harm, keep peace, or doubt their own reactions.
At a practice such as Full Cup Wellness, the phrase “full cup” may resonate because many people arrive in therapy after years of pouring out more than they receive. Whether the care is framed as therapy for women, anxiety therapy, trauma therapy, or depression therapy, the underlying question is often similar: What would it mean to live with more honesty, support, and emotional steadiness?
Therapy cannot remove every demand. It cannot make other people behave well. It cannot guarantee that life will become simple. But it can help a person stop abandoning herself in order to survive those demands.
What early sessions often feel like
People often imagine the first therapy session as either a dramatic confession or a formal interview. It can contain pieces of both, but most first sessions are more ordinary than that. The psychologist will likely ask what brings you in, what symptoms you are noticing, how long they have been present, what you have tried, and what you hope will change. There may be questions about sleep, appetite, relationships, work, medical history, safety, past therapy, trauma exposure, family background, and current stressors.
You do not have to tell everything at once. In fact, most people cannot. A first session is the beginning of a clinical relationship, not a performance of vulnerability. It is acceptable to say, “I am not ready to talk about that yet,” or “I do not know how to explain it,” or “I am worried you will think I am overreacting.” Those statements are clinically useful. They show where tenderness and fear live.
A psychologist may also discuss confidentiality and its limits. This is part of ethical care. Therapy needs privacy, but clinicians also have responsibilities related to safety and legal requirements. The exact rules depend on location and circumstances, so they should be explained clearly before deeper work begins.
By the second or third meeting, patterns may start to emerge. A person seeking anxiety therapy may notice that they avoid uncertainty by over-researching, checking, or asking for reassurance. Someone in depression therapy may see how withdrawal brings short-term relief but worsens loneliness. A trauma therapy client may begin recognizing that certain reactions are connected to reminders rather than present danger.
Progress is not always immediate relief. Sometimes the first sign of progress is better noticing. The person catches the spiral sooner. They name the shutdown. They pause before sending the defensive text. They realize that a wave of shame is a trauma echo, not a fact. These moments may sound small, but they are often the building blocks of recovery.
Signs that professional support may be worth considering
Many people wait until they are in crisis before contacting a mental health service. Sometimes that is unavoidable. But therapy can also be appropriate before everything falls apart. Distress deserves care even when you are still functioning.
Consider reaching out when any of the following are true:
- Anxiety, sadness, irritability, numbness, or fear is interfering with sleep, work, school, parenting, relationships, or daily responsibilities.
- You are avoiding ordinary situations because they feel overwhelming, unsafe, or impossible.
- You feel stuck in patterns you understand intellectually but cannot seem to change.
- Memories, nightmares, body reactions, or emotional shutdown are disrupting your present life.
- You are relying more heavily on isolation, substances, overwork, control, or other coping strategies that create new problems.
This list is not a diagnostic tool. It is a practical mirror. If you recognize yourself in one or more of these descriptions, it may be time to talk with a licensed professional.
The difference between coping skills and deeper change
Coping skills are valuable. Breathing practices, grounding exercises, scheduling tools, thought records, movement, sensory strategies, and communication scripts can all help. In moments of acute anxiety or trauma activation, a simple grounding exercise may be exactly what allows someone to stay present. During depression, a basic activity plan may help interrupt a punishing cycle of isolation.
But coping skills are not the whole of therapy. If care stops there, some people feel temporarily steadier but not deeply changed. They know how to calm down, but not why the same wound keeps reopening. They can label a cognitive distortion, but still feel worthless. They can breathe through panic, but still organize their life around fear.
Deeper therapy asks more layered questions. What did you learn you had to be in order to be loved? What feelings were unsafe in your family? What does your body expect will happen when someone is disappointed in you? What losses have never been mourned? What would you do if guilt were not steering? What part of you believes rest must be earned through collapse?
These questions are not meant to keep people in the past forever. They are meant to free the present from patterns that were shaped elsewhere. A psychologist may move between practical symptom relief and deeper exploration depending on timing. In a hard week, the work may be very concrete: eating, sleeping, staying safe, getting through the next few days. In a steadier season, the work may turn toward old beliefs, relational patterns, grief, or identity.
Judgment matters here. Too much depth too quickly can overwhelm. Too much focus on surface coping can leave important pain untouched. Good therapy adjusts.
Anxiety, depression, and trauma often overlap
Mental health categories help clinicians communicate, study treatment, and organize care. They can also help people feel less alone. There is relief in hearing, “This has Therapy for women a name,” or “Other people experience this too.” But real lives rarely fit into one clean box.
Anxiety and depression frequently reinforce each other. A person may feel anxious about failing, then withdraw because the anxiety is exhausting, then become depressed as life grows smaller. Depression may reduce energy and concentration, which leads to missed responsibilities, which increases anxiety. Trauma can sit underneath both, making the nervous system more reactive and the self-concept more burdened by shame.
A woman who appears depressed may be living in a near-constant state of threat at home or work. A person requesting anxiety therapy may be having trauma reminders. Someone seeking trauma therapy may also need support for depression that developed after years of carrying unprocessed pain.
This is why careful assessment matters. Treating only the most visible symptom can help, but it may not be enough. If panic is connected to trauma reminders, the work may need to include trauma-informed care. If depression is maintained by isolation and self-criticism, therapy may address both behavior and belief. If anxiety is driven by perfectionism and fear of rejection, the work may include relational history and present-day boundary practice.
A psychologist does not need to make the first session perfect. But over time, care should become more individualized, not less.
What progress can look like in ordinary life
Progress in therapy is sometimes dramatic, but more often it appears in daily moments that would not impress anyone else and mean everything to the person living them.
A client who once canceled every appointment when anxious drives to the office with a racing heart and stays. A person with depression showers after three days and eats something with protein. A trauma survivor notices the urge to apologize when they have done nothing wrong, pauses, and lets the silence exist. Someone who used to answer every family demand immediately waits until morning. A woman who believed her needs were “too much” says, calmly, “That does not work for me.”
Symptoms may reduce. Panic attacks may become less frequent. Sleep may improve. Depressive episodes may shorten. Trauma reminders may lose some intensity. But progress also includes changes in relationship to symptoms. Instead of fearing anxiety, a person learns how to respond to it. Instead of believing every depressive Psychologist fullcupwellness.com thought, they learn to question it. Instead of treating trauma responses as personal failures, they understand them as adaptations that can be softened over time.
There are setbacks. This should be said plainly. A difficult anniversary, conflict, illness, loss, or major life transition can stir symptoms that had been quieter. Setbacks do not erase progress. They often reveal where more support is needed. Therapy is not a straight climb out of pain. It is more like developing a steadier way to return to yourself.
Choosing a psychologist or mental health service
Finding care can feel strangely vulnerable. You may be evaluating credentials, availability, cost, location, and specialization while already feeling depleted. It is reasonable to ask questions. It is reasonable to want someone who has experience with your concerns. It is reasonable to try a first session and notice whether the fit feels workable.
Helpful questions include:
- Are you licensed to provide psychotherapy in this state or jurisdiction?
- What experience do you have with anxiety, depression, trauma, or the concerns I am bringing?
- How do you typically approach treatment, and how collaborative is the process?
- What should I expect in the first few sessions?
- How do you handle situations where symptoms worsen or more support is needed?
The answers do not need to be filled with jargon. In fact, clear language is often a good sign. A psychologist should be able to explain their approach in a way that feels understandable and respectful. You do not need to know therapy terminology to receive good care.
Fit also includes emotional tone. Some people need warmth and gentleness before they can risk honesty. Others need a therapist who will kindly interrupt avoidance. Many need both. Empathy does not mean passivity. Challenge does not require harshness. The best therapeutic relationships often include a feeling of being deeply respected and gently invited to grow.
When therapy feels uncomfortable
Therapy is not always soothing. Sometimes it is relieving to finally speak. Other times it stirs grief, anger, fear, or fatigue. People may leave a session feeling lighter, or they may need a quiet evening afterward. This does not automatically mean therapy is going badly.
There is a difference, though, between productive discomfort and feeling unsafe, shamed, coerced, or chronically misunderstood. Productive discomfort has some sense of purpose. It may be hard to talk about avoidance, but the conversation helps you see a path forward. It may be painful to name trauma, but the pacing feels collaborative. It may be uncomfortable to examine a relationship pattern, but you do not feel humiliated.
If something feels off, bring it into the room if you can. “I felt overwhelmed last session.” “I think we moved too fast.” “I am worried you do not understand why this matters.” “I need more structure.” These conversations can strengthen therapy. They also give the psychologist important information about how to adjust care.
A strong therapist will not need you to be an ideal client. You are allowed to be hesitant. You are allowed to have mixed feelings. You are allowed to want help and fear change at the same time.
The quiet courage of beginning
People often apologize in therapy for crying, rambling, Therapy for women Full Cup Wellness not knowing where to start, or “being a mess.” None of that needs an apology. Pain rarely arrives organized. It comes tangled with history, body sensations, unfinished conversations, protective habits, and the private meanings people have carried for years.
Psychologist care for anxiety, depression, and trauma concerns is not about becoming a different person. It is about having skilled support as you understand what has been happening inside you and learn new ways to live with yourself, your memories, your relationships, and your future. It is about reducing symptoms, yes, but also about restoring dignity where shame has taken up too much room.
A mental health service such as Full Cup Wellness may be one place to begin that process. Whether you are seeking therapy for women, anxiety therapy, trauma therapy, depression therapy, or a broader conversation with a psychologist, the first step does not have to be eloquent. It can be as simple as saying, “I think I need help,” or “Something is not working,” or “I cannot keep carrying this alone.”
That is enough to start.
Name: Full Cup Wellness
Address: 1700 Eureka Road, Suite 155, Roseville, CA 95661
Phone: (916) 705-2896
Website: https://fullcupwellness.com/
Email: [email protected]
Hours:
Monday: 8:00 AM - 8:00 PM
Tuesday: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Wednesday: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Thursday: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Friday: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Saturday: 12:00 PM - 7:00 PM
Sunday: 12:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Open-location code / plus code: PQR3+W6 Roseville, California, USA
Map/listing URL: https://maps.app.goo.gl/CxD9V58rsSzXWt7Q8
Google Map:
Socials:
https://www.facebook.com/fullcupwellnessonline/
https://fullcupwellness.com/
Full Cup Wellness provides psychotherapy for adult women from its Roseville office at 1700 Eureka Road, Suite 155, Roseville, CA 95661.
The practice is led by Dr. Holly Spotts, Psy.D., a licensed psychologist with experience supporting women through anxiety, depression, trauma, relationship stress, and major life transitions.
Full Cup Wellness offers in-person therapy in Roseville and online therapy for clients located in California, Florida, and Mississippi.
The practice uses an integrative therapy approach, drawing from methods such as Emotionally Focused Individual Therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Cognitive Processing Therapy, Dialectical Behavior Therapy, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and mindfulness-based care.
Full Cup Wellness serves women who are looking for a supportive place to slow down, understand their patterns, and reconnect with themselves in a more grounded way.
Clients in Roseville, Granite Bay, Rocklin, Citrus Heights, Folsom, and the greater Sacramento area can contact the practice to ask about in-person availability.
For online therapy, clients should confirm eligibility and availability based on their current state location and clinical needs.
To ask about scheduling or a consultation, call (916) 705-2896 or visit https://fullcupwellness.com/.
The public map listing for Full Cup Wellness points to the Roseville office near Eureka Road, with plus code PQR3+W6 Roseville, California, USA.
Full Cup Wellness does not provide crisis services; anyone experiencing a mental health emergency should call or text 988, call 911, or go to the nearest emergency room.
Popular Questions About Full Cup Wellness
What does Full Cup Wellness do?
Full Cup Wellness provides psychotherapy for adult women. Publicly listed areas of focus include anxiety, depression, trauma recovery, relationship concerns, support for mothers, adult children of emotionally immature parents, and high-achieving or professional women.
Where is Full Cup Wellness located?
Full Cup Wellness is located at 1700 Eureka Road, Suite 155, Roseville, CA 95661. The practice also offers online therapy for eligible clients in California, Florida, and Mississippi.
Who is the therapist at Full Cup Wellness?
Full Cup Wellness is led by Dr. Holly Spotts, Psy.D., a licensed psychologist. The official website describes her as specializing in the unique challenges faced by modern women.
Does Full Cup Wellness offer online therapy?
Yes. Full Cup Wellness publicly lists online therapy for women located in California, Florida, and Mississippi. Clients should confirm current eligibility, availability, and clinical fit directly with the practice.
What therapy approaches does Full Cup Wellness use?
The practice describes its approach as integrative. Publicly listed approaches include Emotionally Focused Individual Therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Cognitive Processing Therapy, Dialectical Behavior Therapy, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and mindfulness-based work.
Does Full Cup Wellness offer therapy for anxiety and depression?
Yes. Full Cup Wellness lists therapy for anxiety and depression among its specialties. The practice works with women who may be experiencing worry, low mood, self-criticism, relationship stress, or feeling stuck.
Does Full Cup Wellness offer trauma therapy?
Yes. Trauma recovery is publicly listed as one of the practice’s specialties. Clients should contact Full Cup Wellness directly to discuss whether the practice is an appropriate fit for their needs.
What are Full Cup Wellness’s hours?
Public day-by-day business hours were not listed during review. Contact the practice directly to confirm current scheduling availability.
Is Full Cup Wellness a crisis service?
No. Full Cup Wellness does not provide crisis services. In a mental health emergency or immediate danger, call or text 988, call 911, or go to the nearest emergency room.
How can I contact Full Cup Wellness?
Call (916) 705-2896, email [email protected], visit https://fullcupwellness.com/, or view the public Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/fullcupwellnessonline/.
Landmarks Near Roseville, CA
Eureka Road: Full Cup Wellness is located on Eureka Road in Roseville, making this the most practical local reference point for clients visiting the office.
Douglas Boulevard: Douglas Boulevard is a major Roseville corridor near the office area. Clients nearby can contact Full Cup Wellness to ask about in-person therapy availability.
Sutter Roseville Medical Center: This major medical campus is a familiar landmark near the Eureka Road corridor. Full Cup Wellness serves clients from its nearby Roseville office and through eligible online therapy.
Maidu Regional Park: Maidu Regional Park is a well-known Roseville park and community destination. Clients in nearby neighborhoods can reach out to Full Cup Wellness for therapy options.
Downtown Roseville: Downtown Roseville is a central local district with shops, restaurants, and civic destinations. Full Cup Wellness serves Roseville-area clients from its Eureka Road office.
Westfield Galleria at Roseville: The Galleria is one of the area’s best-known shopping destinations. Clients in and around north Roseville can contact Full Cup Wellness about scheduling.
Fountains at Roseville: This shopping and dining area is a familiar landmark near the Galleria. Full Cup Wellness is a local therapy option for clients in the broader Roseville area.
Granite Bay: Granite Bay is close to eastern Roseville. Residents can ask Full Cup Wellness about in-person appointments in Roseville or online therapy when eligible.
Rocklin: Rocklin is a nearby Placer County city. Clients in Rocklin may find the Roseville office convenient or may ask about online therapy options.
Citrus Heights: Citrus Heights is southwest of Roseville. Adults seeking therapy for women’s mental health concerns can contact Full Cup Wellness to ask about fit and scheduling.
Folsom Lake: Folsom Lake is a major regional landmark east of Roseville. Clients in nearby communities can reach out to Full Cup Wellness for Roseville-based or online therapy availability.
Sacramento: Sacramento is the larger metro area surrounding Roseville. Full Cup Wellness serves local clients from Roseville and online clients in eligible states.