The Practitioner

Present With You.
Not In Front of You.

“Present with you, not in front of you.”

The Person

Who She Is

She has spent years in the room with people who are exhausted in ways sleep does not touch. Women in transition. Women who have held it together so long they have forgotten what it feels like not to. Women who came to Hawaii for rest and found themselves lying awake at midnight wondering why they still feel like themselves from before — not from here, not from now.

Her training spans somatic experiencing, Five Elements theory, emotional regulation, and energy clearing. But her real qualification is presence — the capacity to arrive without agenda, to sit with what is actually happening, and to work with the body rather than around it.

She is not a therapist. She is not a coach. She is a practitioner — which means her job is to be with you in the room, not to interpret you from a distance.

Training

Certifications & Approach

The skills she brings to every session — and what each one actually means in practice.

Somatic Experiencing

A body-first approach to processing stored stress and trauma. Rather than talking through what happened, somatic work helps the nervous system complete what it started — releasing what the body is still holding.

Five Elements Theory

A diagnostic framework from Traditional Chinese Medicine that maps emotional and physical patterns to five elemental archetypes. Used to identify what is depleted and orient each session toward real restoration.

Emotional Regulation

Training in the nervous system dynamics of stress, overwhelm, and shutdown. Not therapy — a practical understanding of how the body moves between states, and how to guide it gently toward settled.

Energy Clearing & Acupressure

Light intentional touch informed by meridian theory. Specific points, specific intentions, full consent. The physical component of a session that many clients find most surprisingly powerful.

A Note

On Anonymity

She does not share her name publicly. This is intentional — and it matters.

When a practitioner leads with credentials and a personal brand, the session becomes about her. When she arrives without a name, without a face that's been studied online beforehand, the session stays where it belongs: with you.

Many clients have said this was the thing they did not expect to appreciate. The absence of biography created space. The session was not about meeting someone. It was about arriving somewhere.

Her anonymity is a form of presence. It keeps the attention where it should be.