Our ability to show up as authentically ourselves has a direct relationship with collective liberation.

There’s actually something very wrong with the societies we live in, and we internalise the distortions of our exterior world through various cultural programming. The society we live in is cruel and not structured to support the experience of being human. So when we try to fix ourselves to fit into this disordered society, it doesn’t work, and our mental health problems get worse. We can’t improve our well-being by trying to fit into our society.

I have a different way of doing things.

You can click here to read about my 6 month coaching program for rejection sensitivity.

If you are interested in my therapy services, you can click here.

This is the name of both my Patreon and Podcast, where I offer tools, insights, and reflection prompts, to specifically support you in navigating the collective liminality we are experiencing. I share about my own struggles and journey to humanise myself and offer real, embodied wisdom and experience, not just theoretical or philosophical advice. Both of these offerings are somatic-based and focused on integrating our spiritual, emotional, and mental experiences and health through the body.

Click for more information on my Patreon

Listen to my Podcast here

I am adding a listener Q & A segment on my podcast where I answer questions related to navigating chaos and liminality. My answers will address plurality, complexity, compassion, and center unlearning colonialism, neuroqueer perspectives, and somatic approaches.

Submit Questions Here

Specialising In Rejection Wounds

You can purchase a $5 video on Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria here.

Blog

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Welcome to my social imagination blog. Where I challenge our collective limiting beliefs and imagine forward-facing beliefs to replace them, that better serve us as humans and our collective experience.

  • The DSM, the manual used to diagnose Autism and other mental health experiences, is a colonial tool. In what we call the USA, therapists are expected to use the DSM to pathologise people with mental health disorders. In reality, our mental health is a much more complicated and dynamic state of being — it is…