Devin Raber, left, is joining the team with reiki master Danielle Girard, Optimal Healing owner Ashley Benson and Director of Community Engagement and Spiritual Development Shannon Toye.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Optimal Healing was opened in 2019 by Ashley Benson, who wanted to help people receive quality mental health care with access to other wellness and healing services.
"I realized there was a real need and market for something beyond typical mental health like the sterile environment of going into therapy and working with kids and families," Benson said. "The need for that to me was just an absolute necessary and the environment that I wanted to create for my clients."
Benson is a licensed social worker and therapist who works primarily with children. She has more than 20 years experience in therapy and consulting and holds postgraduate degrees in clinical social work and advanced practice with children and adolescents.
A few years ago, she purchased the former carriage barn of the Sanford Blackinton Mansion on East Main Street, bringing a number of other wellness practitioners under the Optimal Healing umbrella.
Optimal Healing provides different types of mental health support for people, a goal Benson said she wanted to bring to the community so that they could have services easily accessible. That was important to her own healing journey, she said.
"That combination of wellness and healing and doing talk therapy but also getting to the yoga class and getting inside my body and learning how to breathe were all imperative to my own journey and healing. So that parallel process, along with my practice, just brought to light that real need for people to be able connect those things, and our communities are difficult due to geography, to different silos in the community, and so bringing that under one roof was important to me just to give people access," Benson said.
"Talk therapy is not for everybody but a yoga class might be and so putting that all in one place — you don't have to do all the things, you can just pick one or you can do several, maybe eventually you start with one and it grows into something more."
Optimal Healing has a range of services addressing mental, physical, and spiritual needs. Some of these services include yoga, massage, reiki, individual and group therapy, and halotherapy.
The space recently brought on former North Adams Yoga instructor and owner Devin Raber to the team.
"I'm very excited that I will have a space for my clients to continue their own healing methods to continue their practice to branch out and to work with other professionals." Raber said.
She had owned and operated North Adams Yoga on Holden Street for a little over eight years. She wanted a career change but knew she still wanted to teach yoga — now she will be teaching at Optimal Healing five times a week.
Benson is still expanding. She plans to open a full-service spa in May and also plans to bring on more mental health clinicians.
To celebrate the addition of Raber, and tarot reader and teacher Annalyse Stys to the team, as well as honor reiki master Danielle Girard's new role as a yoga instructor, Optimal Healing is hosting a series of events from Thursday to Sunday, titled "Intentional Acts of Loving Kindness."
Feb. 13 at 6:30 p.m.: Cacao Ceremony and Drumming Circle.
Feb. 14 at 6:30 p.m.: Lion Heart Manifestation Candles.
Feb. 15 at 10 a.m.: Partner Yoga with Thai Massage.
Feb. 16 by appointment: Tarot Reading with Rivertown Tarot.
Registration for these events can be found on the website.
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RFP Ready for North County High School Study
By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The working group for the Northern Berkshire Educational Collaborative last week approved a request for proposals to study secondary education regional models.
The members on Tuesday fine-tuned the RFP and set a date of Tuesday, Jan. 20, at 4 p.m. to submit bids. The bids must be paper documents and will be accepted at the Northern Berkshire School Union offices on Union Street.
Some members had penned in the first week of January but Timothy Callahan, superintendent for the North Adams schools, thought that wasn't enough time, especially over the holidays.
"I think that's too short of a window if you really want bids," he said. "This is a pretty substantial topic."
That topic is to look at the high school education models in North County and make recommendations to a collaboration between Hoosac Valley Regional and Mount Greylock Regional School Districts, the North Adams Public Schools and the town school districts making up the Northern Berkshire School Union.
The study is being driven by rising costs and dropping enrollment among the three high schools. NBSU's elementary schools go up to Grade 6 or 8 and tuition their students into the local high schools.
The feasibility study of a possible consolidation or collaboration in Grades 7 through 12 is being funded through a $100,000 earmark from the Fair Share Act and is expected to look at academics, faculty, transportation, legal and governance issues, and finances, among other areas.
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