Cardinal Care Resource Center

Cardinal Care
RESOURCE
CENTER

Healing and growth don’t end when a session does. Books and planners are tools that help patients carry insight, structure, and self-understanding into their everyday lives.

WELLNESS DEVICES

At Cardinal Care, we believe mental wellness is not just about the mind — it’s about the connection between mind, body, and environment. Wellness devices, such as light therapy lamps, blood pressure monitors, and relaxation tools, help bridge that connection in daily life.

THERAPY LIGHT LAMPS

Why we include this:

For many people, exposure to bright, full-spectrum light is an effective complement to therapy and behavioral strategies—especially during darker seasons or for those who spend many hours indoors. Therapy Lights offers customizable settings so you can tailor your “dose” of light without harsh glare, making it more user-friendly and sustainable in daily life.

Woman sitting on couch using blood pressure monitor at home with chamomile flowers on table.

BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORS

Why we include this:

Mental health and physical health are deeply interconnected. For many of our patients — especially those taking psychiatric medications — monitoring blood pressure is an important part of safe, whole-person care.

Books & Planners

Healing and growth don’t end when a session does. Books and planners are tools that help patients carry insight, structure, and self-understanding into their everyday lives.

BOOKS

Why we include this:

Books can serve as therapeutic companions between sessions — extending the insight, reflection, and healing process beyond the clinical setting. They are not meant to replace therapy, but to support it by deepening understanding, normalizing experiences, and offering evidence-based tools in accessible ways.

A young woman with natural hair enjoys reading a book by the window with warm sunlight.
Person writing in a planner with coffee at a café, focusing on planning and productivity.

PLANNERS

Why we include this:

Many individuals managing ADHD, depression, anxiety, or other mental health conditions struggle not because they lack motivation or discipline — but because their executive functioning (the brain’s system for planning, prioritizing, and organizing) is overworked or under-supported. Therapeutically, planners and organizational tools are not about productivity for productivity’s sake.
They’re about helping people create mental structure and emotional safety.