Combining Modalities in a Coaching Intensive
Many people navigating grief and life transitions wonder which healing modality is “right” for them. This post explores why coaching intensives often combine multiple approaches—such as somatic grief healing, trauma-informed coaching, and narrative work—to support the whole person. When mind, body, and relationship are included, healing can feel steadier, more regulated, and deeply integrated.
Why Coaching Intensives Can Unlock Emotional Breakthroughs
Many people feel frustrated when they intellectually understand their grief or patterns but still feel emotionally stuck. Emotional blocks are often protective nervous system responses — not resistance or failure. In this piece, we explore how coaching intensives and trauma-informed grief support create the time and safety needed for deeper emotional access, somatic integration, and lasting breakthrough.
When Love Leaves Bruises
Relationship trauma and grief often overlap when a partnership ends — especially after abuse, infidelity, or chronic conflict. This kind of loss can carry sorrow, fear, attachment wounds, and nervous-system exhaustion all at once. In this piece, we explore how trauma-informed grief support and somatic grief healing can help you rebuild safety, identity, and steadiness after relational harm.
Why Longer Coaching Sessions Can Feel So Different
Longer coaching sessions can feel different—not because they’re overwhelming, but because the nervous system finally has enough time to settle, process, and integrate. This piece explores how extended coaching sessions support nervous system regulation, emotional processing, and embodied healing during grief, loss, and life transitions—especially when care is trauma-informed and thoughtfully paced.
Why Emotional Safety in Relationships Matters
Emotional safety is the foundation of trust, connection, and healing — especially during grief, loss, and life transitions. This piece explores what emotional safety in relationships truly means, why it can feel hard to access after trauma or attachment wounds, and how gentle, somatic, trauma-informed support can help restore a sense of steadiness and connection over time.
How Trauma Shows Up When Routines Reset
When routines reset, the nervous system often responds before the mind understands why. This gentle, trauma-informed reflection explores how trauma and routine changes can activate survival responses—especially for those navigating grief, loss, and life transitions—and offers compassionate, body-based ways to support regulation and emotional safety.