Locations and Contact

Connect with Us!

Our Everchanging office is located in Rocky River, Ohio but we also meet in various locations throughout Northeast Ohio and virtually.

Office Address:

20525 Center Ridge Road Suite 138
Rocky River, Ohio 44116

Phone:

(440) 595-5482

Email:

hello@everchangingcounseling.com

Directions to the office: Our building is at the corner of Center Ridge Road and Linden Road in Rocky River. Park in the large surface parking lot between the three office buildings, ours is the east building 20525. Enter through the door with overhang and turn left at the elevator. Our door has our logo on it and is the second on the left #138, down the three stairs.

Everchanging’s Mission

To serve individuals, families, and professionals of all backgrounds and ages with personalized therapeutic and learning experiences that are challenging, fun, and engage the whole person.

Everchanging’s Values

Authenticity

Acceptance

Adaptation

Adventure

Assertive Communication

Everchanging’s Land Acknowledgment

For thousands of years indigenous people lived from and cared for the lands and waters of Ohio, and our state’s name comes from Ohi:yó, an Onöndowa’ga:’ (Seneca) term commonly understood to mean “great river” or “beautiful river.” We in Northeast Ohio are on native land. By the start of the 1800s, nearly all Indigenous villages in Ohio were forcibly displaced by white colonial settlements, and in colonizing Ohio attempts were made to eradicate Indigenous people and their cultures through abusive boarding schools and forced assimilation, coerced moves to reservations, enslavement, and genocide. Today, Native Americans of diverse ancestries and tribal affiliations are our neighbors and colleagues in Northeast Ohio and are contributing members of our regional community. Some of those tribes removed are actively working toward land reclamation in Ohio and sustaining their heritages, beliefs, and practices. 

Those tribes who were here in Ohio are the Odawa, Ojibwe, and Potawatomi tribes of the Anishinaabeg; Erie; Delaware; Cayuga and Seneca tribes of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois); Myaamia (Miami); Kaskaskia, Piankeshaw and Wea tribes of the Peoria; Shawnee; Whittlesey; and Wyandotte; and those who continue to be here are the Choctaw, Diné (Navajo), Haudenosaunee (Iroquois), Lakota (Sioux), Odawa, and Ojibwe nations.

Land acknowledgments are only one small part of reconciling the wounds of colonization. Other actions we can take toward healing are to

Donate time and money to regional indigenous organizations.

Support Indigenous-led efforts to create change.

Seek and share modern day indigenous voices.

Check in with and work through your own beliefs and biases regarding colonization, land use, and human rights.