Holly Davis
Group and Individual Clinician. LPC-Associate.
Dallas Theological Seminary
Master of Arts in Counseling. Completed May 2025.
Texas A&M University
Bachelor of Business Administration in Management. Minor in Hispanic Studies, Certificate of International Business. Completed 2013.
Holly earned her Bachelor of Business Administration in Management from Texas A&M University in 2013, with a minor in Hispanic Studies. After several years working in the corporate world, she began to feel drawn toward something more personal and rooted in human connection. That longing eventually led her to Dallas Theological Seminary, where she completed her Master of Arts in Counseling in May 2025.
“I believe that healing begins in spaces where people feel safe enough to be honest about their pain, their story, and their desperation for change. I know firsthand how hard it can be to ask for help. I work collaboratively with clients to better understand their experiences, strengthen their sense of identity, and create meaningful, sustainable change in recovery.”
Her training has taken place across both clinical and non-clinical settings, giving her hands-on experience with substance use, trauma recovery, and the relational struggles that often surface alongside them. At Dallas LIFE Homeless Recovery Center, she provided individual counseling to residents recovering from homelessness while leading a weekly psychoeducation group focused on emotional regulation and overall wellness. Her time at Sparrow House Counseling included a family therapy intensive at Burning Tree Ranch, a long-term addiction treatment program in Kaufman, Texas, where she helped facilitate sessions aimed at identifying dysfunctional family patterns connected to substance use. Holly is Level 1 certified in the Gottman Method and has completed additional training in Emotionally Focused Couples Therapy.
Holly views addiction as something that often takes root in disconnection, whether from oneself, from the people who matter most, or from a deeper sense of purpose, and she believes real healing has to address the underlying patterns that keep those ruptures in place. Working within an attachment-based framework, she walks with clients as they grow in self-awareness and develop a greater capacity for regulating emotion. Her hope is that each person she sees can begin to rediscover who they are and move toward a life that feels genuinely their own, shaped by authenticity rather than performance.