Here’s something you don’t hear often in healthcare: a practitioner whose goal is to get you out of her office in six months or less.
That’s Mary Parker. She runs Infinite Potential Counseling right here in Round Rock, and she calls herself a “unicorn of practices” — not as a marketing claim, but because most mental health providers aren’t doing what she does.
She’s looking for root causes.
Most therapy treats the symptom. ADHD gets medication. Anxiety gets managed. Depression gets a prescription. The underlying why stays untouched, and you keep showing up. Mary’s whole model is built around asking why, why does this child have aggressive episodes, why can’t this person sleep, why is a 30-year-old showing signs of perimenopause and fixing that instead.
Her own son was the first proof of concept. He was injured at 18 months and had seven different mental health diagnoses by age 3. Not one of them found the root cause. Mary went back to school to figure it out herself. She found it. He healed. He’s about to graduate college.
Now she applies that same framework to every client who walks through her door. She starts with genetics, family health history going back to great-grandparents, diet, sleep, birth history, and toxin exposure. The answers lead to more questions. The intake alone takes more than an hour.
And most of the time? Start with the food. Cut out processed food, food dyes, and sugar. Thirty-five years of research points to a ketogenic or carnivore diet as the most effective approach to reversing mental health symptoms. Most people just haven’t been told.
One case: a seven-year-old boy with aggressive behavior episodes. Mary kept a food-mood diary and traced it to a specific brand of orange juice — not just the sugar, but the synthetic folic acid in it. Removed the juice. Aggressive behavior gone within a week.
That’s the kind of precision Round Rock now has access to.


