Embracing How You Think
The way your brain works is not something to fix. It is something to understand and support.
Neuroaffirming therapy, consulting, and education for individuals and systems.
About Swift Mind Care
Swift Mind Care supports people and systems doing meaningful, demanding work, bringing together clinical social work, neuroscience, and lived experience to help shift from constant coping into sustainable engagement. Here's what matters: brains aren't broken — they're diverse. Everything here centers dignity, nervous-system awareness, and sustainable well-being, focusing not on deficits but on creating conditions for clarity, regulation, and growth.
Rachelle P. Goldenberg, LCSW is the therapist, consultant, and educator behind Swift Mind Care. With over 17 years of experience supporting neurodivergent, LGBTQ+, and culturally diverse communities, she brings both professional expertise and lived experience as a neurodivergent person, grounding her work in “neuroaffirmativity” — the understanding that different brains represent natural human variation.
Neuro-affirming care honoring how different brains work
Evidence-based practice grounded in neuroscience and social work
Practical tools that translate into daily life
Human-centered systems supporting people in real environments
The Approach
Partnering with individuals and organizations to reduce overwhelm, strengthen functioning, and build environments where different minds can thrive.
Neuro-Affirming Care
Honoring how different brains work. The way your brain works — whether you're autistic, ADHD, highly sensitive, or think differently — is not something to fix. It is something to understand and support.
Evidence-Based Practice
Grounded in neuroscience, clinical social work, and solid research, this approach taps into how the brain and nervous system really work. Rather than focusing on what's lacking, it uses practical, lasting strategies built for everyday life, creating conditions that support balance, clear thinking, and meaningful connection.
Human Centered Systems
Providing support to individuals within their real-life environments—workplaces and communities—while developing thoughtful, sustainable systems that prioritize dignity and promote nervous system health.