It is not every day you see a skate company thinking about mental health in a real and practical way.
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hat is why what Jacuzzi Unlimited is doing matters.
Having a therapist on staff is not a marketing angle. It is a genuine investment in the people who make skateboarding what it is.
Pro skater John Di Lorenzo recently shared his appreciation, writing that Jacuzzi Unlimited is one of the only skateboard companies he knows of with a therapist on staff.
Di Lorenzo Posted:
"@jacuzziunlimited ; one of the only skateboard companies (that i know of) with a therapist on staff. It means a whole lot to me and countless others i am sure, this is a much needed appreciation post. Thank you @sidewalkdistribution
He said it means a whole lot to him and to countless others, and that it felt like something worth recognizing. His message was simple and sincere.
For a lot of skaters, the board has always been more than wood and wheels. It has been an outlet, a way to deal with stress, frustration, identity, and belonging.
But that does not mean everyone figures it out alone.
Having access to a therapist through a skate company sends an awesome message. You are not just valued for your footage or your name on a deck. You are valued as a person.
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Skate Therapy shared a bit of the thinking behind their work, explaining Adlerian Play Therapy and the idea of the four crucial Cs.
These are connection, capability, courage, and counting. The belief is that encouraging these four elements helps kids develop in healthy ways. What stands out is how naturally those ideas fit with skateboarding.
Connection shows up at the park every day. Skaters hype each other up, film each other, and build friendships that last for years.
Capability grows every time someone keeps trying a trick until it finally clicks. Courage is there in every attempt, especially after a hard slam.
Counting is about feeling like you matter, like your presence makes a difference in a session or a crew. Skateboarding has been teaching these lessons all along, even if no one was calling them by name.
By formally partnering with a therapist and making that support accessible, Jacuzzi Unlimited is acknowledging what skaters have always known deep down.
The mental side of skating is just as real as the physical. Dealing with pressure, expectations, injuries, social media, and life outside skating can weigh heavy. Having someone trained to help navigate that is not weakness. It is care.
There is also something powerful about normalizing therapy in a culture that has not always talked openly about mental health.
Younger skaters seeing a company make that choice might feel more comfortable asking for help themselves. That ripple effect can go further than any ad campaign.
This kind of move sets an example for the rest of the industry. Skateboarding has always prided itself on community.
Backing that up with actual resources strengthens that claim. It shows that supporting skaters goes beyond product and promotion.
