My work sits at the intersection of life, self-image, and business — supporting women to make choices that are aligned with who they are, not who they’ve learned to be.
I don’t fix women.
I don’t tell them who to become.
I create spaces where clarity can surface — and where what’s true has room to be acknowledged.
That’s where change begins.
I work with women who are capable, thoughtful, and often outwardly successful — yet sense a quiet disconnect beneath the surface.
Rather than offering answers, I work with:
awareness
reflection
embodied choice
I pay attention to how women:
make decisions
relate to their bodies and self-image
use their energy in life and business
My role is not to direct your life — but to help you hear yourself more clearly.
Woman Thriving wasn’t created as a brand.
It emerged from lived experience — from watching capable women push, perform, and override themselves in order to succeed.
Over time, the same patterns kept appearing:
decisions driven by conditioning
disconnection from body and self-trust
lives that looked full, but didn’t feel nourishing
This work exists to offer another way.
One rooted in presence.
In choice.
In self-trust.

I am the common thread across the Woman Thriving ecosystem.
Each space exists for a different reason:
Life — understanding patterns, behaviour, and choice
Style — working with clothes and self-image as lived expression
Business / Minerva — supporting female entrepreneurs to build sustainable, aligned businesses
The Courtyard — a shared space to pause, reflect, and reconnect
Some women work with me privately.
Some through shared spaces.
Some simply spend time in the Courtyard.
All are valid.

There are different ways to engage with my work.
Some are shared.
Some are private.
If you feel drawn to work with me directly, you’re welcome to begin a conversation.
No script.
No pressure.
Just an honest starting point.
If you’re interested in my wider body of work — including speaking, writing, and other projects — you can find that here.

You already know more than you think.
Sometimes all that’s needed
is the right space to listen.