A compassionate way to relate to suffering
In hard moments, many of us reach for self-criticism, harsh self-talk, and impossible expectations. This work invites a different response — kindness, patience, and understanding — and offers a way of relating to suffering that leaves you steadier and more whole.
The relationship you have with yourself is the foundation for every other relationship in your life. It shapes your experiences, your goals, and how you care for yourself and the people you love. As you bring awareness and warmth to your inner world, you invite more peace, presence, and ease into daily life — and find more room to move through anxiety, low mood, worry, stress, and self-doubt.
Eastern wisdom, Western psychology
Mindfulness has been well adapted to the Western psychological experience, which I am well versed to teach — and I have also studied the traditional Eastern roots from which the practice originally arose. Blending the two lets us honor the depth of contemplative wisdom while grounding it in what modern psychology understands about the mind, the body, and healing.
Eastern roots
Buddhist practice offers a profound understanding of suffering, impermanence, and the freedom found in meeting the present moment with acceptance and loving awareness.
Western psychology
Contemporary research shows how mindfulness and self-compassion support emotional regulation, resilience, and well-being — and how to bring them into everyday life.
Why self-compassion matters
What if, instead of turning on yourself in a hard moment, you chose to meet yourself with the same care you would offer a dear friend? Self-compassion asks exactly that — and far from making us soft, it tends to make us stronger and more resilient. It frees us from inherited societal and cultural pressures and helps us build a nurturing relationship with ourselves.
Through mindfulness and compassion practices, we can tend to core themes like feelings of unworthiness, low mood, and perfectionism. With practice, you deepen self-awareness, widen self-acceptance, and strengthen your capacity to work skillfully with your thoughts and emotions.
How we practice together
This is experiential and practical. Some of the ways we work:
Guided meditation
In-session practices that steady the mind and body, and that you can carry into daily life.
Mindful awareness
Learning to observe thoughts and feelings with curiosity, creating space between a trigger and your response.
Self-compassion practices
Simple, teachable ways to offer yourself kindness in the very moments you would usually turn critical.
Everyday integration
Bringing presence to ordinary moments, so calm and kindness become part of how you live.
What the research shows
Mindfulness and self-compassion are among the most studied practices in modern psychology, and the findings are encouraging across a wide range of concerns.
Mindfulness & well-being — a landmark meta-analysis found mindfulness-based therapy meaningfully reduces anxiety and low mood (Hofmann et al., 2010).
Self-compassion & resilience — reviews link higher self-compassion with greater well-being and lower anxiety and depression (MacBeth & Gumley, 2012; Neff, 2003).
The mindful brain — research suggests mindfulness practice is associated with changes in brain regions tied to attention, emotion regulation, and self-awareness (Hölzel et al., 2011).
This information is educational and offers a general picture of the research; it stands in place of neither a personal assessment nor medical care.
Teachers & guides I love
If you'd like to explore on your own, these teachers beautifully bridge Buddhist practice and Western psychology. One of my very favorites is Tara Brach — a clinical psychologist and meditation teacher.
Tara Brach
Clinical psychologist and meditation teacher; known for radical acceptance and the RAIN practice of self-compassion.
Dr. Kristin Neff
Pioneering researcher on self-compassion and co-creator of Mindful Self-Compassion (MSC).
Jon Kabat-Zinn
Founder of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), who helped bring mindfulness into Western medicine.
Dr. Rick Hanson
Psychologist who weaves neuroscience with contemplative practice to help cultivate lasting inner resources.
Jack Kornfield
Clinical psychologist and beloved teacher who helped bring mindfulness practice to the West.
Sharon Salzberg
Renowned teacher of lovingkindness (metta) and its place in everyday emotional life.
How we begin
I invite clients into this work with warm curiosity and a sprinkle of open-mindedness. There is nothing to perfect and nothing to force — simply a willingness to turn toward yourself with a little more kindness than before.
From there, we build practices that fit your life and your temperament, so self-compassion becomes less an idea and more a felt, everyday experience — the foundation for living your fullest life.