Some of us live at the crossroads of many stories: stories shaped by migration, loss, resilience, rupture, adaptation, and reinvention. Whether you identify as mixed-race or mixed-heritage, are a third culture kid (TCK), an immigrant or child of one, BIPOC or person in the Global Majority, or navigating a cross-cultural relationship or life path—there is a unique kind of beauty and complexity in carrying many worlds within you.
These experiences often bring richness, but they can also stir questions of identity, belonging, and visibility. There may be grief that is difficult to name, cultural loyalties that feel in tension, or a longing to feel whole in spaces that ask you to fragment. Sometimes what is most deeply felt has never been spoken in the languages you speak — or can only be recognized in the quiet presence of certain places, where belonging is woven into the land itself.
My work is shaped by lived experience and deep attunement to these layers. I offer a space where all of your identities and cultural lineages are invited to be seen and held with care. Lineages are not only bloodlines, but the community members, caregivers, elders and ancestors who nurtured you – whether through their generosity and care, or through the lands and cultures that you live/have lived in.
Together, we can tend to inherited pain, cultivate self-trust, reconcile roots and belonging, and explore what it means to belong to yourself while honoring the many threads that shape your story.
My approach is also shaped by an awareness of how personal and collective struggles often reflect the impact of larger systemic, cultural, and historical forces. Healing is not solely an individual journey, but also a reclamation of narratives that honor ancestral wisdom, the intelligence of the body, and the inherent dignity of each person’s lived experience.
Whether you’re making sense of your own multi-dimensional inner terrain or seeking support in navigating relationships across cultural differences, I welcome the chance to walk alongside you as you explore what healing, wholeness, and rootedness look like on your terms.
Some common themes include:
the meaning of home and belonging
personal boundaries
communication styles
grief over hidden losses
expanded worldview
relationship to authority
cultural chameleon/hidden immigrant
relationship patterns
resiliency and strength
“Own only what you can always carry with you: know languages,
know countries, know people. Let your memory be your travel bag.”
Alexander Solzhenitsyn