.
Feedback

Croton Pyschotherapist Pays it Forward

With a community-based philosophy of therapy, Donna Marder, LCSW, is offering free counseling to anyone in the region who can't afford a copay.

Croton psychotherapist Donna Gerard Marder has for many years been offering her services for free or discounted rates, a generosity which has paid off so much she can now be even more generous.

Marder, who now practices out of the Ajna Center for Wellness and Community which moved to her town of Croton in August, said she had been providing counseling and therapy for many years for “next to nothing.” As many of these nonpaying clients became mentally healthier, they would in turn do better at their jobs and start paying her back. Some, Marder said, have even give her money when a death of a relative left them with an inheritance.

Then Sept. 11 happened and Marder assisted innumerable clients in need in downtown Manhattan, again for nothing. The American Red Cross set up a fund specifically for psychotherapy in aftermath of the terrorist attacks and ended up giving Marder over $100,000 compensation for the people she’d seen through the years. When she realized just how many people she must have helped into order to reach this total, Marder said it was “the shock of my life.”

Armed what she sees as something of a karmic windfall, Marder’s only aim is to give back in an even bigger way.  “The more the merrier,” she said, hoping to offer her services to as many patients in the Northen Westchester/Putnam region as possible who have insurance but may not be able to handle the deductibles and copays. She is considering the money she’s earned back as a grant fund to “pay it forward.”

Marder will take on patients as young as 2 and a half on up. Her areas of expertise encompasses individual, group, family and play therapy for children, men, women and adolescents. Coaching is available as well for personal and work issues, including executives, conflict resolution and career changes.

Marder is also very interested in group therapy and bringing back the old tradition of the sewing circle and quilting bee.

“My treatment of choice…goes back to the sewing circle and quilting bee of colonial America," Marder said. "Women gathered together, not to sew or quilt, which they could do at home, but to discuss family and personal problems. This is a long community tradition,” she said, noting it's a fitting tradition to revisit for this Women’s History Month.

Those interested in learning more can reach Donna Marder, LCSW at 914-271-4514. For information on the Ajna Center visit their website or call 914-827-0100. The center, located on 18 Old Post Road South, Croton, offers pyschotherapy, reiki, massage, coaching, child enrichment programs and much more. 

Ajna owner and founder Tina Triburjo says, “It shouldn’t be a luxury to get help. Her generosity can also help break the cycle – if someone’s kind to you, it gives you hope, which can healing.”

Like us on Facebook  |  Follow us on Twitter  |  Sign up for our newsletter

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Tarrytown-Sleepy Hollow Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Loading comments ...
Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Julia Costa takes a shot on goal against North Salem
Krista Madsen (Editor) May 22, 2013 at 08:19 am
Hurray Mustangs!
Krista Madsen (Editor) May 21, 2013 at 10:37 pm
Quirk of our new system: for anyone posting just press hard returns twice to make paragraph breaks.Read More Thanks for posting this Mike! Great video!!
Stephanie Segarra May 20, 2013 at 04:56 pm
it happens all over..even whole food! check every date!!!!!!!
Krista Madsen (Editor) May 20, 2013 at 10:42 am
Has this happened to others? black juice...ewww! Thanks for writing.
medibeads@gmail.com
Krista Madsen (Editor) May 20, 2013 at 10:44 am
Thanks Blanca for posting. Again contact: medibeads@gmail.com if you want to hear more about gettingRead More a beading party hosted by Blanca Medina. Here's more on her on Patch: http://tarrytown.patch.com/groups/around-town/p/would-you-like-to-learn-how-to-do-this
Krista Madsen (Editor) May 18, 2013 at 02:50 pm
sounds like great stuff, thanks for posting!
Peter Neidell May 18, 2013 at 08:48 am
PLEASE NOTE CHANGE TO ABOVE: Sale is Sunday only- 10 am-3 pm thanks!
Heron May 20, 2013 at 06:28 pm
A big part of the problem is that the teachers' expectations about what supplies are necessary haveRead More become so extreme. When my kids were in school in Tarrytown, we would get a list at the beginning of every school year of the supplies we needed to buy. The parents were asked to buy a separate looseleaf binder for every single class our kids were taking and, for some classes, they asked for a looseleaf AND a spiral notebook. When I was in school, each kid had ONE looseleaf and we separated classes with dividers. Having SIX or seven loose leafs adds to backpack weight and costs a lot of money. My kids supply bills were often close to $100 apiece. The teachers have bought into this idea that all of these supplies are necessary and they are not. I'm not surprised that Staples is offering "rewards programs." Their advertising and marketing efforts have convinced the teachers that you must have a package of 12 red correcting pens, per child.
Sleepy Hollow Tarrytown Chamber May 14, 2013 at 04:25 pm
Congratulations to JoAnne Murray and Willaim Burnette the honorees. Your service and support of theRead More Salvation Army is applauded.