I trained as a photographer. For more than thirty years, the work was about presence, creating the conditions for something true in another person to become visible. The camera is gone. The practice remains.
I came to Ayurveda through a sustained inquiry into what it means to live in accordance with one's own nature, not as an idea, but as a daily practice. The body has its own intelligence. Ayurveda offers a language precise enough to hear it.
Alongside Ayurveda, I have spent many years with the philosophical tradition of Advaita Vedanta, the inquiry into what remains when everything else is taken away. This shapes how I sit with people: not directing, not solving, but attending to what is actually present.
I work with a small number of individuals at any one time. If you are navigating a transition that feels larger than a problem to be solved, I would be glad to speak.