Meet our TEAM below.   

EBC, LLC was founded by Dr. Rad in 2008. Dr. Rad is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist in the state of Virginia. She has been in the mental health field since 1998 and has worked privately as well as a government contractor in various settings. She has a wide range of skills and has broaden her knowledge and experience to be able to find a solution focused approach to her clients needs. She is an author and a poet. You can see her books HERE and read her articles HERE.

A few words about us

Our team
Click on the image to read more

Lanie Belland, PsyD

CBT Specialist

Susie Smith, MS

CBT Specialist

Susie Davis, PsyD

CBT Specialist

Erica Santos

Desk Help

Klaritza Serna, MS

CBT Specialist

John, Michelle, Gary, Sarah, Mike

IT and Platform Team

Tina and Jane
Community outreach

Know More About Our team

Lanie Belland, PsyD

CBT Specialist

I am currenlty pursing my Doctorate Degree in Clinical Psychology at the University of Indianapolis. My experience ranges from leading therapy groups at eating disorder residential centers, to supporting ABA therapy sessions to CBT/DBT. I currenlty provide individual therpay for children, teens and adults who present with anxiety, depression , eating disoorders, self esteems and more.

Susie Smith, MS

CBT Specialist

Susie Graduated from Drexel Univeristy with a BA in Psychology and a Master Degree in Addiction Counseling. Her background includes a focus on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy mixed with a multimodal approach like mixing CBT with client centered therapy. She provides a safe space for her clients and is interested in working with a diverse population. Susie has 10 years of experience in healthcare industry in various roles.

The Neuroscience of Spirit: Mental Health & Belief

Where Science Meets the Soul:
Neuroplasticity & Belief

For decades, science and spirituality were seen as separate worlds. Today, research reveals a profound truth: spiritual practices are not just cultural rituals—they are powerful neural interventions. By engaging in prayer, meditation, and gratitude, we literally rewire our brains for resilience. This article explores the biological mechanisms behind spiritual health.

The Plastic Brain

Neuroplasticity is the brain's ability to reorganize itself by forming new neural connections throughout life. It means your brain is not static; it is a dynamic organ that is shaped by what you think, feel, and do repeatedly.

When we engage in repetitive spiritual practices—like a daily rosary, mindfulness meditation, or gratitude journaling—we are strengthening specific neural pathways. As the saying goes in neuroscience: "Neurons that fire together, wire together."

Key Mechanism

  • 1 Repetition: Daily practice signals importance to the brain.
  • 2 Attention: Focused prayer or meditation activates the Prefrontal Cortex.
  • 3 Reward: Spiritual connection releases dopamine, reinforcing the habit.

The Neurochemistry of Belief

Spiritual practices act as a natural pharmacy for the brain. Use the toggle below to see how chronic stress compares to a brain engaged in spiritual practice.

The Stressed Brain

In the absence of grounding practices, the modern brain often stays in "survival mode."

  • Cortisol (High): Increases anxiety and brain fog.
  • Serotonin (Low): Reduced mood stability and sleep.
  • GABA (Low): Inability to "turn off" worry.

Practices & Evidence

Explore specific spiritual practices and what clinical research says about their impact on mental health metrics.

Mindfulness & Contemplative Prayer

Research shows that 8 weeks of mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) or Centering Prayer can physically thicken the Prefrontal Cortex—the area responsible for emotional regulation and planning—while shrinking the Amygdala, the brain's fear center.

Key Neurochemical:
GABA & Serotonin

Data aggregated from meta-analyses on MBSR and Anxiety (e.g., JAMA Internal Medicine).

Your Neuro-Spiritual Toolkit

Practical, science-backed tools to integrate into your daily life for better mental health.

1. The "Physiological Sigh"

A double inhale followed by a long exhale. This is the fastest way to reduce autonomic arousal (stress) in real-time.

Click to
Start

Click the circle to sync your breath (Inhale as it grows, Exhale as it shrinks).

2. The "3-Minute Morning"

Build neuroplasticity with small, consistent inputs. Try this routine for 21 days.

* Consistency is more important than intensity for neuroplastic change.