Maybe you’re like me?
Listen to this post.
I’m a spiritual teacher, a business strategist, an artist—and an attorney.
I have spent my entire life on a quest to integrate all of myself into deeply satisfying and meaningful work—work that uses all I have to give.
For so long, I could feel a pull in my belly: there was something for me to do, a way to live and express and give, not only personally, but professionally, as me—without leaving any of myself behind.
But it felt impossible.
I had no model for what I wanted—or where I was going. It seemed everyone else was satisfied (by what felt like to me being) professionally siloed.
Why couldn’t I be?
But I was not.
I wondered if I’d spend my entire life with talent (and creativity and depth) wasted. If that was just the way things were and I should grow up and accept it.
I’d done well with my professional life after all. Maybe that had to be enough.
Because I could not see how it was possible to fulfill my longing to be deeply satisfied intellectually, creatively, spiritually and financially.
The truth was: All the pieces were there. They’d been there all along.
But I had no way of seeing how they fit together—and no one to help me.
Over 15 years, by alchemizing guidance from business mentors and spiritual teachers and experimenting—I integrated spiritual practice and strategy into every aspect of my law practice.
(There are at least 7 ways that I did this.)
It changed how I understand the law, and how I show up to the practice of it. It changed how I plan and how I relate to my money, my team and my clients.
It changed which clients show up to work with me—and how they experience what the law can do for their businesses to clarify the right structures for their offerings and workflow, according to their true desires, values and challenges.
That changes how they show up and how their business operates—with profound practical and personal effect.
I then integrated even my art to help other professional women do the work they really want to do how they want to do it—to experience the deep satisfaction they long for: intellectually, creatively, spiritually and financially.
(And far from lose professional respect and financial stability, as they might have feared, they transform their profession in deeply needed ways—and inspire their colleagues—in the process.)
You can do what you really want to do—how you really want to do it.
(It is a thing—and it can be satisfying and profitable.)
There’s a space for you in a focused Intensive or a fully-
For more information:
I’d love to talk to you.
“This is powerful stuff. [What I’ve been carrying around forever] is gone! Such a blessing. I’m on my knees with gratitude.”