My Story
Throughout my life, I always saw myself as a rule follower—someone who stayed on the path laid out for me, doing what was expected. But in my late teens and early twenties, everything began to shift. I entered a period of personal growth and transformation that would change me forever.
During college, I went to therapy for the first time. What began as an attempt to process the grief of losing my Nana led to something much bigger: I started uncovering long-held beliefs and patterns that had been dimming my light and disconnecting me from who I really was. Alongside healing my heart, I found myself asking a powerful, and overwhelming question:
Who am I?
At the beginning of the journey, I felt alone. I was confused, frustrated, and even ashamed at times. I didn’t know it then, but those early steps—the messy, painful ones—were preparing me for a life and career I couldn’t have imagined.
One of the most defining experiences of that season was falling in love for the first time. And like many love stories, it ended in heartbreak. The relationship grew toxic, but I held on, hoping it would get better. After it ended, I struggled to bounce back. Even though I had support around me, I felt unseen—like no one truly understood the depth of my pain or the pace at which I needed to heal.
That heartbreak became a turning point. Through the pain, I discovered my faith and explored spiritual practices that brought me a sense of peace and hope I hadn’t known before. As my curiosity deepened I started working with a few spiritual coaches and healers whose support changed my life. I began to wonder:
Could I do this for someone else?
The more I learned about coaching, the more I felt pulled toward it—like something inside me had been waiting to wake up. I realized that I wasn’t alone in my experience. So many other women, just like me, love deeply and end up feeling broken, unlovable, or unworthy because of it, and the loneliness and self-doubt that can come along in tough times is one of the most agonizing feelings in the world. I knew if I could help even one woman avoid feeling that way, I had to try.
This wasn’t just a career—it was a calling.
Even with a strong sense of purpose guiding me, I found myself on a different path for a while. I spent several years working in HR, gaining firsthand experience in leadership, people management, and business operations. During that time, I also committed to a training program at The Life Purpose Institute and began studying to become a Certified Life Coach. Eventually, the high-pressure environment—and my lack of boundaries—led to burnout. After taking a mental health leave, I made the bold, scary, but soul-aligned decision to close that chapter and step into the next one as a Certified Life Coach, ready to do the work I was meant for.
Since then, my coaching journey has had its own twists and turns, but I wouldn't trade it for anything. Coaching is more than what I do—it's part of who I am. Every time I work with a client, I think of the younger version of me who was lost, hurting, and searching for something more. I am privileged to get to show up for her and for every woman who needs to hear:
You are strong. You are worthy. You don’t have to figure this out alone.
I help women come home to themselves. To trust their inner wisdom. To set boundaries, speak up, and live life on their terms—not according to someone else’s rules or timeline. This shift changed my life, and I know it can change yours, too.
Whatever storm you’re weathering—whether it’s a life transition, heartbreak, self-doubt, a career shift, or the journey back to self-love—I’m here. I’ll meet you in the thick of it, sit with you through the rain, and walk beside you as you find the path that leads you back home to yourself.
My clients don’t just set goals—they create lives that finally feel aligned. They stop feeling small and start believing:
I can do this. I am enough. I am worthy of creating a life that lights me up.
If you can feel that pull in your heart—you’re exactly where you need to be.