You have been holding
something that was never quite named.
The language your nervous system learned first.
Leela Mental Health offers sessions in English, Hindi, and Bengali — because emotional language is not interchangeable. Some clients work in one language throughout. Some move between languages as the session calls for it. Some work in English and are held by a therapist who knows exactly what was just left unspoken.
English
हिंदी
বাংলা
Who we are
A practice that holds
the full weight of it.
The practice was founded by Moitreyee Chowdhury, LMFT, LPCC — a South Asian clinician who has lived on both sides of the ocean, in India and in the West, and who holds this cultural ground from the inside. As Leela grows, the team brings its own lived experiences to the work — the understanding is collective, not singular. When you come here, you do not have to begin by explaining yourself. The context arrives with you.
Named, not diagnosed.
Log kya kahenge
What will people say. The phrase is so ordinary in South Asian family life that it barely registers as a force — until you try to make a decision your family would not approve of, and it is suddenly everywhere. It is in your chest before you speak. It is the voice that checks the thought before it becomes a sentence. Over decades, log kya kahenge becomes indistinguishable from your own judgment. Therapy creates the space to hear the difference.
Intergenerational inheritance
What your parents and grandparents carried — from displacement, from migration, from histories too large to speak — did not disappear. It traveled forward through the body, through silence, through the specific way distress expresses itself in South Asian families: the stomach that never quite settles, the sleep that never fully comes, the tension in the shoulders with no memory attached to it. You may be carrying something that was never yours to begin with. That is not a metaphor. That is how intergenerational patterns move.
The model minority
You have achieved every metric. You are in tech, in medicine, in law, or raising children who will be. And there is a hollowness underneath the achievement that no one around you has words for, because the narrative says this is what success is supposed to feel like. The Bay Area has a particular shape of this. The cost of performing excellence across decades — for your family, for your workplace, for a country that has decided what you represent — is given room here.
The permanent in-between
Too South Asian in America. Too American at home. For many clients, there is no position from which you are fully recognized — not by the country you live in, not always by the family you return to. The in-between is not a temporary state. It is a permanent address. The work is not to resolve it but to live in it with more spaciousness than you currently have.
Your life is the Leela.
Leela is the frame this practice works within. Grief and joy, family loyalty and individual longing — the push and the pull — are the story. The work is to engage with it more fully, more honestly, and with more companionship than you currently have.
South Asian tradition has held the full range of human emotional experience for thousands of years. The Natya Shastra, the ancient Indian treatise on art and emotional life, named nine rasas — emotional essences: love, humor, sorrow, heroism, fear, wonder, peace, and more. A complete map of the emotional life, held with dignity. Leela Mental Health draws on this as a philosophical touchstone — a way of meeting what you feel as something to be witnessed and engaged, carried forward into the full story.
“The goal is to live inside the story with more room than you currently have.”
A region, not a single story
A vast region. Many languages.
One practice.
Faith, where it is part of a client’s life, is held with respect. No tradition is treated as the default. Clients from all religious backgrounds — and none — are received within their own framework.
Sessions are currently available in English, Hindi, and Bengali. As the Leela team grows, it will bring additional languages and lived cultural experiences to the practice. Clients whose language needs fall outside current offerings are supported with referrals when needed — given with care, not as a dismissal.
Clinical approach
East and West, held in
the same room.
Many South Asian clients arrive with an existing practice — meditation, breathwork, prayer, mantra. The work at Leela meets what you already have and works alongside it. Simple somatic and mindfulness-based tools are offered for nervous system regulation. For clients without an existing practice, these are introduced at a pace that fits the person, not the protocol.
Distress in South Asian clients often shows up in the body first — physical tension, disrupted sleep, a heaviness that has no ready-made name. The body’s account of what has happened is received as clinical information. Sessions are held with a family systems lens: the family is in the room, even when only one person is seated there. Collaborative care with psychiatrists, primary care physicians, and school counselors is coordinated with your consent.
EMDR CBT DBT Family Systems Somatic Approaches Mindfulness & Meditation
Expressive Arts Collaborative Care
How we work together
Who we see.
Individual Therapy
One-on-one sessions for South Asian adults navigating anxiety, depression, identity, intergenerational patterns, and life transitions. In English, Hindi, or Bengali.
Individual Therapy
For South Asian couples navigating arranged and chosen relationships, cultural expectations, communication, and the space between what the family wants and what you want.
Family Therapy
For South Asian families holding multiple generations in the same room — parents, children, grandparents, and the weight of what has not yet been said between them.
Parenting Support
For South Asian parents raising children between two cultures — navigating identity, academic pressure, and the particular grief of watching your child become someone your own parents would not entirely recognize.
Teen Therapy
For South Asian teenagers managing academic pressure, family expectations, identity, and the experience of living between two worlds before they have words for either.
Young Adult Therapy
For South Asian young adults — college students, early-career professionals, first-generation graduates — carrying the weight of being the first, or the bridge, or both.
South Asian life has always been expressed.
Many clients arrive with this texture already woven through how they think and feel: a line from a film that names something therapy has not yet found words for, a poem in Hindi or Urdu that holds a grief English cannot quite reach, a piece of music that surfaces something the intake form never asked about. Literature, cinema, visual art, and music are part of how this community has always moved through what is hardest to hold. At Leela, that material is welcome in the room.
The practice name carries this. Leela — the play of life, the great beautiful story. The name is the philosophy.
The people who find this practice.
Leela Mental Health serves first-generation immigrants who have built entire lives in a new country without ever quite unpacking what they left behind. It serves second-generation adults — born here, raised between two worlds, fluent in both and fully at home in neither. It serves South Asian couples navigating arranged expectations and chosen love, and everything in between. It serves parents whose children are pulling away from a culture the parents sacrificed to give them. It serves students at Stanford and other Bay Area universities carrying the weight of being the first, of representing something larger than themselves.
Leela Mental Health serves LGBTQ South Asian individuals who are holding two things at once that their family has not been able to hold together: love for the family, and the full fact of who they are. That position is received here without asking anyone to resolve it. It serves South Asian diaspora communities whose sense of identity is layered across more than one migration, more than one displacement, more than one place called home.
“You do not have to explain your family before we can begin. The context is already in the room.”
Begin here
A fifteen-minute call.
No commitment. Just a beginning.
What clients ask most.
Do you offer sessions in Hindi or Bengali?
Do you work with South Asian families, not just individuals?
What if my family doesn't believe in therapy?
Do you work with LGBTQ South Asian clients?
What is the philosophy behind Leela Mental Health?
Do you serve South Asian clients from across the region, not only from India?
Do you integrate meditation or mindfulness into therapy?
Good Faith Estimate: If you are paying out of pocket or not using insurance, you have the right to a written Good Faith Estimate before your first session. Read the full notice ➞
988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline
Free, confidential 24/7 support for people in distress. Call or text — they will answer.
Crisis Text Line
Free 24/7 text-based crisis support from a trained counselor.
Emergency Services
If you or someone else is in immediate danger, please call 911 or go to your nearest emergency room.
