The Foundation Launches GHF YP

The Foundation Launches GHF YP

Grant Halliburton Foundation recently launched Grant Halliburton Foundation Young Professionals or GHF YP, a personal and professional development organization. Open to young professionals in their 20s and 30s, GHF YP is a home for the next generation of philanthropists to learn and grow while also supporting the organization’s work to advocate for stronger mental health education and suicide prevention in North Texas.

10 Things to Know About Blanca

10 Things to Know About Blanca

Meet Blanca N. Garcia, LCSW-S – Grant Halliburton Foundation’s director of mental health resources. Blanca’s leads the Foundation’s Here For Texas program. A licensed clinical social worker, she has worked with children, teens, and families for more than 10 years as a bilingual mental health clinician. Blanca understands that navigating mental health services is a challenge and was critical in implementing the Foundation’s Here For Texas Mental Health Navigation Line to increase access to mental health resources in North Texas.

Grant Halliburton Foundation Soars into Pegasus Park

Grant Halliburton Foundation Soars into Pegasus Park

Today marks the first day the Grant Halliburton Foundation staff officially begins working at Pegasus Park —the new home of the Foundation. The Foundation was selected to be part of the renovation development off Stemmons Freeway – named in homage to the old ExxonMobil building with the iconic red-winged Pegasus symbol at its top.

Here We Grow Again!

Here We Grow Again!

Grant Halliburton Foundation continues to experience organizational growth propelled largely by the continued need for mental health education and mental health resources in North Texas. The education and outreach team welcomed several new staff members last fall and early this year to reach more people with vital mental health and suicide prevention training.

10 Things to Know About Sonya

10 Things to Know About Sonya

Meet Sonya Parker Goode – Grant Halliburton Foundation’s director of outreach and education. Sonya’s passion for helping people led her to pursue a dual career in education and nonprofit work almost 25 years ago. As a certified life coach and anger management specialist, Sonya enjoys developing and equipping people with tools to increase their confidence, set and respect boundaries, and use effective communication and conflict resolution techniques.

10 Things to Know About Jessica

10 Things to Know About Jessica

Meet Jessica Look – Grant Halliburton Foundation’s Thrive Strategy and Education Manager. Jessica has a master’s degree in educational psychology and brings 20 years of experience working in public and private school settings. As a mother, educator, and mental health advocate, she’s committed to changing the conversation around mental health and providing resources to children and teens in North Texas.

A Farewell Post from Cami

A Farewell Post from Cami

I’ve written a lot of blogs during my time at Grant Halliburton Foundation. Blogs about stress, depression, trans youth, mindfulness – things in my comfort zone. Goodbyes are not in my comfort zone. The thing about homes is that sometimes they change. Sometimes you move to a different city or just down the road. Sometimes what you need from a home changes, but almost every time moving homes really sucks.

Pride Month: Supporting Transgender Youth Mental Health

Pride Month: Supporting Transgender Youth Mental Health

June is Pride Month, and now more than ever, it’s crucial to highlight mental health in the LGBTQ+ community – specifically transgender youth. Right now, there are more than 115 bills under consideration in state legislatures across the country that directly target transgender people.

10 Things to Know About Ashley

10 Things to Know About Ashley

Meet Ashley Gordon Prater, LMSW – Grant Halliburton Foundation’s Mental Health Resources Manager. Ashley works to connect North Texans to vital resources through the Foundation’s Here For Texas Mental Health Navigation Line. A licensed master social worker, she has nearly a decade of direct practice experience working with vulnerable populations, including crime victims, persons with different abilities, veterans, immigrants, and families experiencing poverty.

Grant Halliburton Foundation Celebrates 15 Years of Giving Help and Hope to Families

Grant Halliburton Foundation Celebrates 15 Years of Giving Help and Hope to Families

Vanita Halliburton co-founded Grant Halliburton Foundation in 2006 after her son, Grant Halliburton, died by suicide following his battle with severe depression and bipolar disorder. When Grant was struggling, Vanita searched for resources and found little. Later, she resolved to provide critical mental health resources, so that other families wouldn’t have the same outcome as hers.

Best-Selling Author and Speaker Nora McInerny Delivered Powerful Talk at Grant Halliburton Foundation’s Annual Beacon of Hope Virtual Luncheon

Best-Selling Author and Speaker Nora McInerny Delivered Powerful Talk at Grant Halliburton Foundation’s Annual Beacon of Hope Virtual Luncheon

Grant Halliburton Foundation welcomed Nora McInerny, best-selling author, speaker and podcast host, to share her personal story at the Beacon of Hope at Home Virtual Luncheon on April 30. Presented by The David B. Miller Family Foundation, the luncheon supports Grant Halliburton Foundation’s work providing education, resources and support for children, teen and young adult mental health.

5 Simple Ways To Deal With Stress

5 Simple Ways To Deal With Stress

When discussing a health condition like heart disease, it’s important to talk about the symptoms, treatments, and interventions, but it’s just as important to back up and know what can help prevent heart disease. When discussing mental health conditions like stress, we do the same thing by backing up and talking about stress management.

When You’re More Than SAD

When You’re More Than SAD

The holidays can be hard for a myriad of reasons––family discord, grief, isolation, or loneliness to name a few. This holiday season, there’s no shortage of things that could make it an even harder time to manage. The seasonal shift to winter is a big change, especially in Texas where we are accustomed to having the sun’s heat for most of the year. The days are shorter, nights are longer, and the sun plays it coy.

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