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Aquana Regina Randle, LMFT

Marriage and Family Therapist

War Room Christian Counseling, PLLC​

 

Licensed Psychotherapist

Christian Counselor

Relationship & Empowerment Coach

About Me

Regina Randle is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist dedicated to helping individuals and couples strengthen their relationships, deepen their faith, and navigate life’s most difficult seasons with clarity and confidence.

Before entering the field of mental health, Regina spent a combined 26 years serving in the United States Military and Federal Government. Those years refined her leadership, discipline, and commitment to excellence while shaping her ability to remain steady under pressure.

After years of public service, Regina transitioned into mental health, bringing the same level of structure, integrity, and responsibility into her work with individuals and couples.

Her approach integrates clinical expertise with biblical truth. She helps clients identify underlying patterns, address unresolved wounds, strengthen communication, and rebuild trust within a framework that honors both psychological insight and spiritual formation.

At War Room Christian Counseling, the goal is not simply symptom relief, but restoration — stability, growth, and the tools necessary to sustain meaningful change.

If you are ready to move forward, this is a place to begin.

Our Philosophy

At War Room Christian Counseling, we believe meaningful change begins with the renewal of the mind. By integrating biblical truth, evidence-based practices, and practical application, we provide comprehensive care designed to move individuals and couples from stagnation to stability and growth.

My Story

For 26 years, my professional life was shaped by service in both the Military and Federal Government. Those years placed me in environments where performance was expected and resilience was required. They also exposed me to what people often carry quietly — internal strain that can go unnoticed and the ways it deeply affects relationships and wellbeing.

What I’ve learned is that most people do not come to therapy because they are weak. They come because they feel stuck. Overwhelmed. At a crossroads and unsure of the next step.

When people enter my office, they are often carrying more than they have words for. Pressure. Disappointment. Relational tension. Internal conflict. Sometimes anger. Sometimes silence.

Isaiah 61:1 speaks of being sent to comfort the brokenhearted and proclaim freedom to the captive. That passage has shaped how I understand this work — not as a platform, but as a calling. Not as performance, but as responsibility.

So today, I bring together two worlds: structured leadership and compassionate presence. Clinical training and spiritual grounding. Strength and grace.

This is not work I take lightly. It is work I approach with reverence — a stewardship I carry with intention.

The command. The mission.

— Isaiah 61:1

"The Spirit of the Lord God is on me, because the LORD has anointed me to preach the Good News to those who are suffering; to comfort the brokenhearted; to proclaim liberty to the captives; and freedom to the prisoners..."

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