logo with Roy's initials, RFM, and the words "I Am Roy Mong" underneath

counseling intern | writer | mental health justice advocate

I’m the counseling intern for people of the global majority who are ready to get free.

How many of these feel like they land in your chest, gut, and shoulders?

  • You carry a tension in your body that never quite seems to release, like you’re always bracing for something.

  • Your nervous system is constantly scanning for safety, even in spaces that claim to be “diverse.”

  • You’ve learned to swallow your emotions because a voice says they might be too loud, too much, or not welcome.

  • You’ve been told you’re resilient, but what you really want is softness, rest, and the freedom to fall apart safely.

  • You experience chronic burnout, not just from doing too much, but from holding too much for too long.

  • You move through the world hyperaware of how your skin, your gender, your voice, or your presence is perceived.

  • You’ve had to contort or camouflage parts of yourself to belong, survive, or stay safe.

  • You carry grief, not just your own, but ancestral and collective grief that lives in your bones.

  • You’re working to unlearn survival strategies like people-pleasing and perfectionism because they no longer serve you.

  • You struggle to rest, even when you’re exhausted, because your worth has always been tied to output and sacrifice.

  • You long for community, for spaces where your full self is seen, affirmed, and held without question.

  • You want to reclaim joy in a world that taught you to be small, silent, or stoic.

Roy sitting at a bar-height table with a welcoming smile

If you answered yes to any of the above, I’m here to help.

Hi, I'm Roy! I’m a counseling intern of the Asian diaspora, writer, and mental health justice activist. I’m a survivor, just like you, tending to myself on the healing journey as we all make our way back home.

I offer warm, relational, and culturally-attuned care to people of the global majority in TX. Grounded in a foundation of somatic and parts work alongside decolonial ethics, I approach counseling with critical attention to how the soul wounds of complex trauma, systemic oppression, intergenerational wounds can be healed through community, embodiment, and integration.