Healing the Mother Line
Brittney Scott, Licensed Professional Counselor rooted in San Antonio, Texas and currently living on a military base in California: supporting mothers and daughters in repairing, redefining, and reclaiming their relationships.
For Brittney, the work is deeply relational.
And deeply personal.
She works with mothers and daughters.
Sometimes together, sitting in the same room, navigating the tender space between hurt and hope.
Sometimes separately, helping each woman untangle her own story.
Her focus is clear.
Mother wounds.
Childhood trauma.
Parenting teenagers.
The places where love and pain often coexist.
She helps women name what happened.
Understand how it shaped them.
And decide what they want to carry forward and what they are ready to release.
Choosing Her Own Way
Early in her career, Brittney knew two things.
She wanted to work with women and girls.
And she wanted to do trauma work.
As she learned more about mother-daughter dynamics, everything clicked.
She saw how childhood trauma and maternal relationships ripple through generations.
How unspoken pain becomes patterns.
How healing one relationship can shift an entire family system.
But she also knew she didn’t want to be confined.
Not by agency limitations.
Not by rigid models of therapy that left little room for creativity.
She started her own practice so women could heal on their terms.
In ways that felt honest.
Expansive.
Human.
Her work allows space for nuance.
For storytelling.
For rebuilding trust slowly.
And for redefining motherhood and daughterhood in ways that feel empowering rather than obligatory.
The Courage to Be Seen
If the therapy room feels grounded and steady, the outside world feels far more exposed.
For Brittney, marketing has been the greatest challenge.
Visibility requires vulnerability.
It means speaking publicly about work that is intimate and emotionally charged.
It means opening herself up to opinions.
To criticism.
To the possibility of being misunderstood.
She cares deeply about how she is perceived.
And that makes showing up online feel risky.
There’s a strange tension in being the face of your own company.
A kind of necessary boldness.
She jokes that it requires a touch of delusion.
You have to believe people want to hear what you have to say.
You have to move past feeling “cringey.”
You have to let people watch you learn in real time.
Sometimes a post resonates.
Sometimes it falls flat.
Sometimes an idea succeeds.
Sometimes it fails publicly.
And still, she continues.
Holding Trust with Care
Another quiet challenge is maintaining a full caseload.
Building consistency in a private practice takes time.
But Brittney never forgets that each woman who chooses to work with her is placing enormous trust in her hands.
These are not casual conversations.
They are stories of trauma.
Of strained relationships.
Of longing for connection.
She does not take that lightly.
Even as she grows in confidence, the fear of others’ opinions still lingers.
She wishes she didn’t care what people think.
But she does.
She is human.
And perhaps that humanity is exactly what allows her clients to feel safe.
Because she understands what it means to be seen.
To be vulnerable.
To build confidence one day at a time.
At Reignelle, we celebrate women like Brittney who are bravely breaking generational cycles, creating spaces where mothers and daughters can heal, reconnect, and write new stories together.
