Meet Blair Fulton | Clinical Therapist


We had the good fortune of connecting with Blair Fulton and we’ve shared our conversation below.
Hi Blair, how does your business help the community?
My work helps parents bring connection back into their homes instead of chaos. When parents feel overwhelmed and burned out, it impacts the entire family system. When they feel supported, grounded, and confident, that impact spreads just as far.
I believe mental health care is never just about the individual sitting in front of you. When a parent learns how to regulate their emotions, understand their child’s behavior, and communicate with more clarity, that knowledge ripples outward. It affects their partner, their children, their extended family, their classrooms, and their community.
With my professional training and years of experience working with children, teens, and now parents, I’ve learned how to truly meet people where they are. And when someone feels met without judgment, they feel safe enough to grow. When parents are free to be themselves and feel empowered in their role, they show up differently for the people around them.
Individual therapy becomes generational work. It strengthens families, reduces stress in homes, and creates healthier relationship patterns that last far beyond our sessions. That ripple effect is what makes this work so meaningful to me.

Can you give our readers an introduction to your business? Maybe you can share a bit about what you do and what sets you apart from others?
My business was shaped by years in nonprofit and community mental health, working in schools and in homes with families navigating real-life stress. I supported kids and teens with big emotions and parents who were exhausted, overwhelmed, and quietly doubting themselves. Those experiences taught me how to meet families exactly where they are, without judgment and without fluff.
I found my niche working with parents of tweens and teens because I kept seeing the same thing. The kids were struggling, but the parents felt lost. The tween years can feel like emotional whiplash. One minute your child is sweet and open, the next it is eye rolls, slammed doors, and “you do not understand.”
I often call myself a “tween translator.” I help parents understand what is developmentally normal, what is stress, and what their child is actually trying to communicate underneath the attitude. When parents understand what is really going on, they respond differently. And when they respond differently, everything shifts.
The parents are the captains of the ship. When they are burned out, the whole house feels it. Parenting tweens and teens is tough work, and most parents are expected to just figure it out. I am passionate about giving them a space that is just for them to process, learn practical tools, and rebuild confidence.
Being bilingual in Spanish has also allowed me to connect with families who might not otherwise have access to therapy in their preferred language. Access and feeling understood matter deeply to me.
I offer virtual sessions across Colorado so parents can get support wherever they are. I work with parents individually, as a couple, and I also offer joint sessions with the child if that is what the family wants. My goal is to meet families where they are, with flexibility, practical tools, and support to create real change in their homes.
What I want the world to know about my brand is this: parents of tweens and teens deserve support, not shame. When you help a parent feel steady during one of the most turbulent seasons of parenting, you change the trajectory of an entire family. That ripple effect is what drives my work.

Let’s say your best friend was visiting the area and you wanted to show them the best time ever. Where would you take them? Give us a little itinerary – say it was a week long trip, where would you eat, drink, visit, hang out, etc.
If my best friend were visiting for a week, I’d plan a mix of Colorado nature, laid-back local spots, and just enough fun to make it feel special without being over-scheduled.
First stop would absolutely be Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre. Even if there isn’t a concert, I love just sitting there, taking in the views, and letting it remind you how beautiful this state is. It never gets old.
We’d plan a morning hike at Roxborough State Park. The red rock formations are incredible, and it’s the perfect place for an impromptu photo shoot if that’s your vibe. It feels peaceful but still dramatic in the best way.
On a warm day, we’d head out to Deckers and float down the South Platte River. It’s one of those simple Colorado experiences that feels adventurous but still relaxed. Sunscreen, snacks, and just letting the river carry you for a few hours.
For something a little more low-key, we’d golf at Heather Gardens Golf Course in Aurora. It’s approachable and a great way to spend a sunny afternoon.
One evening would definitely include a movie at Alamo Drafthouse Cinema – Littleton. Dinner and a movie in one spot just feels like a treat.
For a slower morning, we’d grab coffee and wander through the art at Hooked on Colfax. It has that creative, neighborhood feel that makes you want to stay longer than you planned.
Midweek, I’d take them to the Denver Botanic Gardens in the middle of the day when it’s quieter. It’s calm, beautiful, and feels like a reset in the middle of the city.
For food and drinks, we’d grab a beer at Breckenridge Brewery – Littleton and make the drive to Bud’s Bar for burgers. Bud’s is about as hometown as it gets, and it’s one of those classic Colorado spots you have to experience.
For me, the best week here is a mix of big scenic views, local gems, and unhurried time together. Colorado does casual and beautiful really well, and that’s exactly how I’d plan it.

Shoutout is all about shouting out others who you feel deserve additional recognition and exposure. Who would you like to shoutout?
I would love to dedicate my shoutout to the clinical supervisors who have guided me throughout my career, as well as my graduate school professors from the University of Denver’s International Disaster Psychology Program.
Each supervisor I’ve had across different clinical settings took the time to mentor me, challenge me, and help me grow. They didn’t just teach me techniques. They modeled integrity, compassion, and how to sit with people in their hardest moments. That kind of mentorship shapes you far beyond the therapy room.
My graduate professors also played a huge role in forming how I see the world and the systems we all live within. The International Disaster Psychology program taught me to think systemically, culturally, and globally about mental health. It trained me to look beyond the individual and consider families, communities, and larger social contexts.
I truly would not be the therapist or the person I am today without those mentors investing in me the way they did. Their guidance continues to ripple through every client and family I work with.
Website: https://Monsteracounseling.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/therapyblair/


