Disaster Spiritual Care in Texas

Disaster Spiritual Care and Flood Recovery Support in Texas

Private disaster spiritual care and flood recovery support for survivors, responders, helpers, families, clergy, medical workers, volunteers, and community members carrying grief, anger at God, moral injury, responder burden, spiritual distress, or the weight of what they saw and could not stop.

Texas Spiritual Counseling provides virtual disaster spiritual care across Texas, with in-person appointments by arrangement in Hill Country Texas.

This is not psychotherapy, diagnosis, medical care, psychiatric care, emergency care, or treatment of mental-health disorders.

Schedule an Initial Spiritual Counseling Consultation

After Disaster, Not Everything Fits Therapy Language

After a flood, death, emergency response, community tragedy, or prolonged recovery effort, people may need more than practical help and more than symptom language.

Disaster can leave people carrying grief, guilt, anger, faith questions, spiritual distress, moral injury, family pressure, and the memory of what they saw or could not stop.

Some of this belongs in licensed mental-health care. Some of it also needs clinical spiritual care that can name the moral, spiritual, and meaning-level impact of what happened.

Who This Is For

Disaster spiritual care may fit adults who are carrying:

  • Flood recovery grief, disaster exposure, or community tragedy
  • Responder burden after emergency response, search, rescue, recovery, or support work
  • Grief after sudden death, child loss, family loss, or traumatic loss
  • Anger at God, loss of belief, doubt, numbness, or spiritual confusion
  • Moral injury, guilt, regret, or unresolved responsibility
  • The weight of what they saw, heard, carried, decided, or could not stop
  • Family conflict, relational pressure, substance-use impact, risky behavior, or hard decisions after disaster
  • Support alongside licensed therapy when mental-health care is also involved

What Disaster Spiritual Care Helps Clarify

Disaster aftermath does not always arrive as one clear problem. It can show up in grief, anger, silence, over-functioning, family conflict, sleep disruption, loss of faith, numbness, guilt, or the inability to explain why life feels different now.

A session may help clarify:

  • What the person is carrying from the event or recovery period
  • What grief, guilt, anger, fear, or belief conflict is holding
  • What changed in the person’s sense of God, meaning, safety, or responsibility
  • What belongs in pastoral counseling and clinical spiritual care
  • What may need licensed therapy, medical care, psychiatric care, or another referral
  • What next step is responsible, honest, and possible now

Flood Recovery Spiritual Care

Flood recovery can continue long after the water is gone.

Survivors, responders, helpers, families, volunteers, clergy, medical workers, and community leaders may keep carrying what happened in ways that affect work, family, faith, decision-making, and daily life.

Clinical spiritual care gives that material a place to be named without forcing the whole crisis into a diagnosis before it is understood.

Responder Burden and Moral Injury

Responders and helpers often carry the part of disaster that other people never see.

They may carry images, decisions, guilt, anger, responsibility, silence, or the pressure to keep functioning while the body and spirit are still registering what happened.

Disaster spiritual care can support the spiritual and moral weight of response work while also identifying when licensed mental-health care should be involved.

Anger at God After Disaster

Disaster can press directly on belief.

People may ask, “Where was God?” “How could this happen?” “Why children?” “Why them?” “Why not me?” or “What do I believe now?”

This is a place to bring anger, doubt, numbness, guilt, grief, and loss of belief without being corrected, preached at, or rushed toward easy answers.

Clinical Spiritual Care, Not Psychotherapy

Dr. Charlie Michele Hornes, DMin, BCC, MCPC, is a Doctor of Ministry, Board Certified Chaplain, ordained PC(USA) minister, and clinical spiritual counseling provider with more than two decades of experience in hospital chaplaincy, crisis response, palliative care, emergency settings, pediatric and perinatal loss, pastoral care, grief care, moral injury support, higher education, and leadership environments.

Her work uses chaplaincy-based clinical spiritual care assessment and pastoral counseling. It is not psychotherapy, diagnosis, medical care, psychiatric care, emergency care, or treatment of mental-health disorders.

Clinical spiritual care can stand alone when pastoral counseling is the right fit. It can also work alongside licensed therapy when mental-health care is needed.

Disaster Spiritual Care Across Texas

Virtual disaster spiritual care, flood recovery support, pastoral counseling, and clinical spiritual care sessions are available across Texas.

In-person appointments may be available by arrangement in Hill Country Texas.

Start With an Initial Consultation

The Initial Spiritual Counseling Consultation is a focused first session to clarify the presenting issue, identify the care lane, and determine next steps for pastoral counseling, referral, coordination, or ongoing support.

Schedule an Initial Spiritual Counseling Consultation

Frequently Asked Questions

What is disaster spiritual care?

Disaster spiritual care is pastoral counseling and clinical spiritual care for survivors, responders, helpers, families, and community members carrying grief, anger at God, moral injury, spiritual distress, responder burden, or meaning-level impact after disaster. It is not psychotherapy, diagnosis, or medical care.

Is this flood recovery counseling?

It is flood recovery spiritual care and pastoral counseling. It supports grief, faith questions, anger at God, moral injury, responder burden, and spiritual distress after flood exposure or recovery work. It is not psychotherapy or treatment of mental-health disorders.

Is this for first responders?

Yes. Disaster spiritual care can support first responders, emergency responders, medical workers, clergy, volunteers, helpers, and community leaders carrying the spiritual or moral weight of what they saw, did, decided, or could not stop.

Can I talk about anger at God after a disaster?

Yes. Anger at God, loss of belief, doubt, numbness, guilt, grief, and the question “How could this happen?” are welcome here.

Is this therapy?

No. This is pastoral counseling and clinical spiritual care. It is not psychotherapy, diagnosis, medical care, psychiatric care, emergency care, or treatment of mental-health disorders.

Can this work alongside my therapist?

Yes. Clinical spiritual care can work alongside licensed therapy when mental-health care is already involved or needed. Coordination can happen with client permission.

Do you take insurance?

No. Sessions are private pay. Texas Spiritual Counseling does not bill insurance directly.

Can I submit receipts?

Yes. Upon request, an itemized receipt can be provided for clients who want to attempt reimbursement through insurance, EAP, HSA/FSA, employer assistance, church assistance, disaster-relief, or other benefit programs. Reimbursement is not guaranteed.

Is this emergency or crisis care?

No. This practice does not provide emergency, crisis, medical, psychiatric, or suicide-intervention care. If there is immediate danger, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.

Do you work virtually?

Yes. Virtual sessions are available across Texas. In-person appointments may be available by arrangement in Hill Country Texas.

Your Questions, Answered

  • No. This is not psychotherapy, diagnosis, medical care, psychiatric care, or treatment of mental-health disorders.

    Texas Spiritual Counseling provides pastoral counseling and clinical spiritual care. The work focuses on grief, faith questions, moral injury, spiritual distress, hard decisions, disaster exposure, and the parts of a crisis that need language before they are forced into the wrong category.

  • Yes, for clients who are specifically seeking Christian counseling.

    The work can include Christian faith, scripture, prayer, theology, church experience, spiritual struggle, anger at God, or questions of calling and meaning when the client wants that included.

    It is also not limited to Christian clients.

  • No.

    Clients may be Christian, interfaith, spiritual-but-not-religious, agnostic, atheist, unsure, done with church, or carrying no formal belief system at all.

    The work begins with the person in front of me, not with a required belief statement.

  • Yes.

    Anger at God, loss of belief, numbness, doubt, guilt, grief, and the question “How could this happen?” are all welcome here.

    This is not a space for forced answers, religious correction, or spiritual bypassing.

  • Yes.

    Clinical spiritual care can stand alone when pastoral counseling is the right fit. It can also work alongside licensed therapy when mental-health care is already involved or needed.

    With client permission, coordination or referral can happen when appropriate.

  • No. Sessions are private pay. I do not bill insurance directly.

  • Yes. Upon request, I can provide an itemized receipt for clients who want to attempt reimbursement through insurance, EAP, HSA/FSA, employer assistance, church assistance, disaster-relief, or other benefit programs.

    Reimbursement is not guaranteed and depends on the client’s plan, payer rules, and benefit structure.

  • No.

    This practice does not provide emergency, crisis, medical, psychiatric, or suicide-intervention care. If there is immediate danger, call 911, go to the nearest emergency room, or contact a local crisis resource.

  • Yes.

    Virtual sessions are available across Texas. In-person appointments may be available by arrangement in Hill Country Texas.

  • Yes.

    Clinical spiritual care is not limited to religious clients. Many people need support around meaning, grief, guilt, anger, loss, responsibility, or what no longer makes sense, whether they believe in God or not.