/ Therapist turned coach

I hold the depth and the doing at once.

Psychological training. International practice. Helping high-achieving women who are holding everything together on the outside and falling apart on the inside.

Close study of a desk surface — an open notebook, a ceramic mug, and a pen resting mid-page, north-facing window light casting soft diffused shadows across the paper, observational and still
Close study of a desk surface — an open notebook, a ceramic mug, and a pen resting mid-page, north-facing window light casting soft diffused shadows across the paper, observational and still
— The practice

30 years in the room before this.

I am a therapist who is now an international coach. For 30 years I sat in therapy rooms listening to high-achieving women tell the truth they could not say anywhere else, about lives that looked fine and felt unbearable.

My training began in clinical settings, supervised therapeutic work with people navigating loss, burnout, and the kind of identity fractures that don't show up on a résumé.

Over a decade of international client work followed across time zones, cultures, and the particular pressures of high-functioning professional life. That breadth is the practice.

Neither one alone is enough.

Therapeutic training

Pragmatic forward movement

Formal clinical training means I read what sits beneath the presenting problem: the patterns, the contradictions, the silence between sessions. That literacy doesn't switch off.

Coaching means we move. We set real directions, make concrete decisions, and build the capacity to act differently instead of simply understanding why things are the way they are.

If you've read this far, you're probably the kind of person I work with; rigorous, self-aware, and ready for something more considered than a six-week program.