Soul Care

Spirituality is a deep, intuitive and, often, a private experience. If you feel a particular yearning to experience yourself within the flow of the divine life with you, engaging a relationship of spiritual coaching and accompaniment can be valuable. Maybe you’ve never imagined there could be support that is rooted in a deep spiritual tradition while acutely non-dogmatic and exploratory, grounded and expansive.

This offering is for anyone seeking to develop, deepen, or reimagine their connection with the sacred. Whether that connection is with God, your soul, or a sense of wholeness, this work meets you where you are. You might find yourself drawn to:

  • Finding peace and wholeness after experiences of fragmentation in religious contexts, especially Christianity.

  • Walking through the story of your spiritual or religious roots and finding what fits now.

  • Contemplation and/or Meditation as a pathway to connect with God and your inner being.

  • Spiritual integration practices to bridge different aspects of yourself with the sacred within.

  • Devotional and healing practices.

  • Exploring unanswerable (and answerable) questions within a wisdom tradition.

Through inner inquiry, open-hearted conversation, contemplative practices, and willingness to explore, this practice helps you cultivate a vibrant connection to what truly matters. It offers a supportive path to embrace an authentic and embodied spiritual life.

**Though I also work as a counselor, this is not clinical mental health care.

  • Every Child has known God, not the God of names, not the God of don’ts, not the God who ever does anything weird, but the God who only knows four words and keeps repeating them, saying: “Come dance with Me.”

    —Hafiz

  • Here is a truth that we can scarcely imagine: where God is, there is the soul, and where the soul is, there is God. Think about it. When you do, you'll stop looking for God here or there, now or then, and pay attention to where you are and who you are in your soul. Only then will you finally see that the soul and God are one. The rest will be easy.

    —Meister Eckhart

  • Come, come, whoever you are. Wanderer, worshiper, lover of leaving. It doesn't matter. Ours is not a caravan of despair. come, even if you have broken your vows a thousand times. Come, yet again , come , come.

    —Rumi

  • Dare to declare who you are. It is not far from the shores of silence to the boundaries of speech. The path is not long, but the way is deep. You must not only walk there, you must be prepared to leap.

    ― Hildegard of Bingen

  • We are too often unhappy, while on and on the world remains the gift of presence God meant it to be at the beginning and sustains in every moment, and when we catch even a glimpse of this, our restlessness begins to open to a deeper stillness within us where we will come to know that what is now torn apart and broken will finally come back to the stillness which rests in the deep oneness of this life and in the breadth of love.

    —Meister Eckhart

  • Christ has no body but yours, No hands, no feet on earth but yours, Yours are the eyes with which he looks Compassion on this world, Yours are the feet with which he walks to do good, Yours are the hands, with which he blesses all the world. Yours are the hands, yours are the feet, Yours are the eyes, you are his body. Christ has no body now but yours, No hands, no feet on earth but yours, Yours are the eyes with which he looks compassion on this world. Christ has no body now on earth but yours.

    —Teresa of Avila

Most of us were never taught how to live from a center. We learned to manage, adapt, and perform, often skillfully, but underneath there can be a quiet exhaustion, a sense of holding life together rather than truly inhabiting it. Psychologically, we know the experience of ourselves as containing many competing parts driven by fear, hope, longing, love, survival, and expectation. The loudest voices within us often shape our lives, whether or not they reflect what feels most deeply true. Yet this is not only psychological; it is spiritual. When we lose touch with, or never fully discover, our deepest center, life can feel like striving or endurance rather than coherence and peace.

This work invites a gentle re-centering: listening for the song of your deepest self (what I might call soul but has many names), and orienting toward the living presence of God, the Divine, the Source of Love—however you name it. From that center, love and service can flow more naturally, not as obligation but as expression.

I seek to hold multiple perspectives, systems, and responsibilities with care. This allows me to work with situations that feel overwhelming, morally complex, or emotionally charged — without becoming reactive or collapsing into certainty.

Whatever your background, there is a meaningful and vital path of wholeness available to you—and it can be steadying to walk it with a trusted companion.

This work may be a good fit if:

  • Your questions feel more about meaning, purpose, or direction

  • You want to re-connect with Christianity but aren’t sure how

  • You’re exploring faith, spirituality, or belief in a more open or integrated way

  • You’re discerning vocation, calling, or life transitions

  • You want accompaniment rather than therapy

  • You’re seeking coherence between your inner life and how you are living

  • You want to feel connected to love of God in a relevant, meaningful way.

My practice is rooted in the Christian contemplative tradition and offered in a spacious, inclusive way that welcomes wildly diverse beliefs, questions, and experiences.