About Me
My Journey of Remembrance
My spiritual journey began in my early twenties, shaped by the echoes of a traumatic childhood and the turbulence of my teenage years. A book—Jonathan Livingston Seagull—was the first light that pierced the darkness, sparking a deep curiosity about healing and self-discovery. Not long after, I found yoga, and with it, the ember of personal growth, empowerment, awakening, and expansion was ignited. During my first savasana, I wept—not from sadness, but from an overwhelming connection to my body, my breath, and the Divine Spirit within me.
After three years of practice, I embarked on my first Yoga Teacher Training, unknowingly stepping into the first layer of my Dharma—my life’s work. At the time, I could not have foreseen that my journey as a yoga teacher would intertwine with marriage and motherhood, but life had its own divine plan. Within three and a half years, I had three children, each one deepening my spiritual practice in ways I never imagined.
As I walked the sacred path of wife and mother, I clung to the practices that had become my foundation. The desire to understand the human experience led me to study human potential, manifestation, meditation, yoga, and universal laws with incredible guides and teachers. With each healing moment, I expanded my knowledge and earned certifications as a meditation teacher, life coach, Reiki practitioner, and an advanced 500-hour yoga teacher.
While raising my children, I worked with clients worldwide, guiding them through empowerment, meditation, manifestation, and yoga. In 2013, I was given what seemed like my dream job—helping launch a nonprofit to teach mindfulness in schools. It was a profound opportunity, yet after three years as Program Director, I faced a reckoning with my own ego and a divine calling to break free from unseen chains.
Answering that call, I stepped into a two-year sabbatical—a period of the most intensive spiritual work I had ever experienced. Unlike the traditional seeker’s path of retreating to monasteries or mountaintops, my pilgrimage unfolded within the walls of my own home. Through micro-dosing plant medicine, deep meditation, mantra work, and the devotion of Bhakti Yoga, I awakened. My heart burst wide open, revealing a love so vast and pure it defied imagination. For the first time, I experienced Samadhi—Oneness. In that space of surrendered trust, I reconnected with the divine presence of Yeshua the Christ, and the illusions of limitation fell away.
I broke free—from the binds of my own mind, past traumas, limiting beliefs, and self-sabotaging patterns. No longer seeking to “fix” myself, I remembered the truth: I was already whole, already complete in God. Sitting in my meditation chair, I felt a profound contentment, believing my journey of guiding others had come to an end. But Spirit had other plans.
As I emerged from my sabbatical, I felt the sacred call to serve once more. This led to the creation of The Space, a spiritual center birthed from my devotion and trust in divine guidance. It became one of my most profound accomplishments, an offering of my knowledge, experience, and heart to the world. Yet, as with all great spiritual journeys, it tested me. This time, however, I embraced the lessons, knowing that every challenge was in service of my highest good.
Through it all, my work with clients deepened, becoming ever more potent and transformational. Each encounter reaffirmed the ultimate truth: I am no different from anyone else. The healing, awakening, and liberation I have experienced are available to all who seek. My role is simply that of a sister on the path, holding up a mirror to the boundless potential within each soul.
As I step into this next chapter, my purpose has never been clearer. I am here to walk beside those who are ready to crack open their hearts and rediscover their own divine truth—in their way, in their time. It is my greatest honor to serve as a guide, a light, and a witness to the unfolding of Spirit within others.
As our dear brother Ram Dass so beautifully said, “We are all just walking each other home.”
It is my privilege to take that walk with you.
