Matthew Brill, L.P.C.

Associate Director

Matthew Brill, M.A. began his career in mental health in 1986. In 1998 completed the Masters in Arts in Counseling degree at Eastern Mennonite University's accredited Graduate Counseling Program in Harrisonburg, Virginia and is licensed by the Virginia Board of Counseling as a Licensed Professional Counselor. Mr. Brill has worked in Virginia as a therapist, mental health professional and administrator in a variety of settings including performing psychological research funded by the Federal Government, a Vocational Rehabilitation Counselor for the Commonwealth of Virginia, treating adolescents as well as mild and severely intellectually disabled children in psychiatric hospitals while providing family therapy and parental support, and providing individual, couples, and family therapy at a non-denominational Christian outpatient therapist practice with an emphasis on parents and children experiencing different stages of the divorce process. He was also active in performing Critical Incident Debriefings for employers and taught classes to court ordered parents on how to reduce the impact of divorce on their children and themselves.

He began serving in Charlottesville and the surrounding counties as a primary clinician and case manager for children in a non-profit Therapeutic Foster Care agency while also working closely with each child’s Family of Origin and Therapeutic Foster Family. After several years he transitioned to serving families, social services, and the Virginia Department of Juvenile Justice by providing therapy to court ordered children that were at risk for being removed from their families due to their extreme behaviors at home and in the community.

Mr. Brill currently provides services for:

  • Parents and their children within the age range of four and upward.
  • Those parents needing support with parenting their teenager.
  • Teens needing a person to talk to about their problems.
  • Depression in adults and minors.
  • Adults and children needing guidance during any of the stages of divorce.
  • People requiring safe and sacred space for Christian Counseling.
  • Anyone whose lives have been touched by family members with an intellectual disability, an attention deficit, or a form of autism.
  • Gifted and talented children and adolescents having difficulties with social-emotional issues and underachievement.