Here Tomorrow was born from a question no parent—and no person—should ever have to ask:
Where do you go when someone you love is struggling, and there’s nowhere to turn?
Joe Kenney found himself asking that question when his son, Gary, was battling deep depression.



Despite a lifetime of professional success and connections across the country, Joe discovered something devastating: meaningful, immediate mental health support simply wasn’t available when it was needed most.
“I couldn’t find any help here. I didn’t know where to go or what to do, and I know everybody,” Joe later shared. “How is the average person supposed to find help?”
In April 2019, Gary died by suicide.
At Gary’s funeral, Joe made a promise that he would create something different. Something that removed barriers. Something that would be there for others before it was too late.
That promise became Here Tomorrow.
Just two years later, in early 2021, Here Tomorrow opened its doors, offering something the community had long needed but couldn’t find: no-cost, immediate, judgment-free suicide prevention support from people who truly understand.
From the beginning, the mission was clear:
No cost. No wait. No one turned away.
What started as one family’s response to unimaginable loss has grown into a community resource built on compassion, lived experience, and hope.
Here Tomorrow removes the two most common barriers to mental health support: accessibility and affordability.
Since opening in 2021, Here Tomorrow has supported more than 4,000 individuals at no cost—many of whom were feeling hopeless or worried about someone they love. Support is available immediately and can continue for up to a full year, because healing doesn’t follow a timeline.
At the heart of our work are certified Suicide Prevention Specialists. People with lived experience who walk alongside individuals and families, offering real connection, encouragement, and practical tools.
We believe that lived experience matters.
And we believe that when people feel seen, supported, and understood, hope becomes possible.
Here Tomorrow exists so fewer families have to ask, “Where do we go now?”
And so more people can say, “I found help when I needed it.”