Our Mission

Our mission is to provide comprehensive, accessible, neurodiversity-affirming care to children and families regardless of neurotype.

Our Values

Our tree logo is a visual representation of Neurobloom’s values: Nurture, Empower, Thrive. We believe, similar to how the strongest trees have the deepest roots, that effective treatment requires a solid foundation to support the people we serve to stretch, grow, and flourish.

Leaves/blossoms: (Thrive)

  • Authentic participation: There is no right or wrong way to communicate, live, or be. We believe support should be customized to each client’s and family’s needs and goals.
  • Life-long learning: The most impactful therapy occurs in collaboration with the people we serve. We are committed to the process of learning and evolving our practice based on feedback from the neurodivergent and disabilities community.

Trunk/branches: (Empower)

  • Client-driven therapy: Each individual is the expert of their own experience. We do not condone practices that exclude clients from being collaborators in their care.
  • Foster community: We protect belonging as a basic human need. We listen to neurodivergent voices to create spaces that are inclusive to all neurotypes.

Roots: (Nurture)

  • Embrace all neurotypes: We respect the differences of neurodivergent people. We celebrate the unique strengths and perspectives that come with neurological differences, while acknowledging the barriers neurodivergent people face.
  • Promote felt safety: People do the best they can, when they can. We promote felt safety as the foundation to regulation and participation.

Our Team

Mollie Madi Voigt, OTD, OTR/L

Mollie (Madi) graduated from Macalester College with a degree in psychology and education. Throughout undergrad and post-grad, Mollie worked with various supported living organizations where she assisted adults with developmental and intellectual disabilities with daily routines and community engagement. Her work with this population prompted her to seek a career in occupational therapy. Mollie went on to receive her Doctorate of Occupational Therapy from Baylor University in 2022. She has been working in the pediatric outpatient setting since graduation. Mollie’s practice is grounded in the neurodiversity-affirming paradigm and utilizes a strength-based approach to support a range of needs including regulation, sensory processing, social engagement, executive functioning, participation in daily activities, and more. Mollie is passionate about using occupational therapy to support neurodivergent individuals and their families to live authentically and meet their goals. Mollie has considerable continuing education in the neurodiversity affirming model including, but not limited to:

    • Goal Writing for Autistic Students: A Neurodiversity-Affirming Approach, Learn Play Thrive
    • Learn Play Thrive Neurodiversity Summit 2024 & 2025
    • Responsive Feeding Therapy: The Foundational Series
    • Toileting, Interoception, & Nutrition, Kelly Mahler
    • PDA Clarity Masterclass, At Peace Parents

Mollie lives near downtown Seattle, where you may find her paddle boarding on Lake Union. In her free time, she also enjoys taking care of her 50+ houseplants, crafting, and cuddling with her cat, Leo.

Stefanie Marvin, CCC-SLP

Stefanie graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee with a master’s degree in Communication Sciences and Disorders. During her clinical fellowship and first few years in the field, Stefanie worked in a pediatric outpatient setting specializing in infant and child feeding therapy.  Here she gained valuable experience and honed her skills in oral functioning, breast/bottle feeding, transitioning to solids, and supporting selective eating in children and teens. She established a foundation in relationship-driven and strengths-based practice early on in her career by earning an advanced certificate in DIRFloortime. Since moving to the Seattle area, Stefanie has expanded her scope of practice and competency as a neurodiversity-affirming provider by continuing to seek out professional development and continued education opportunities, acting on her core value of life-long learning.  Examples of this include, but are not limited to: 

    • DIRFloortime Advance Certificate through ICDL 
    • 2023 Fall ICDL Floortime Conference, including Connecting Through Play in Feeding Therapy  
    • Precision CPD 2025 Play Conference 
    • Additional professional development training and lectures in
      • Beckman Oral Motor Protocol
      • Myofunctional therapy, therapeutic massage, and myofascial release  
      • Responsive Feeding Therapy 
      • Kaufman Speech to Language Protocol for Childhood Apraxia of Speech
      •  Meaningful Speech Echolalia Course for Gestalt Language Processing