The life you worked so hard to build no longer fits.
There’s a point in the midlife transition for women when the things that once made sense… don’t anymore.
Not all at once. Not dramatically.
Just enough that you notice.
The career you worked so hard for. The roles you’ve played. The life you’ve built.
From the outside, it may look perfectly fine.
But inside, something feels off.
Most women assume they should be grateful. Push through. Stop questioning it.
But what if the questioning is the point?
What if this phase isn’t asking you to go back to who you were — but to become more fully who you are?
You're not broken. You're changing.
The women I work with aren’t looking for surface-level answers.
They’re thoughtful, capable, high-achieving women who have spent years doing what needed to be done.
And now they’re wondering why it no longer feels the same.
They’ve outgrown parts of their life. They’re questioning what they thought they wanted. They can feel something shifting — but they don’t know what to do with it.
They don’t need more advice.
They need a way to understand what’s actually happening so they can move forward with clarity, confidence, and a deeper trust in themselves.
That’s the work I do.
My daughter is one of the reasons this work matters so much to me.
For most of my life, I relied on my mind.
I built a career in strategy and consulting. I solved problems. I made things make sense.
But underneath all of that was a deeper question: How do we know when we’re living a life that’s truly ours?
That question became impossible to ignore when I became a mother because I didn’t just want answers for myself.
I wanted to understand what it means to live a meaningful life — and to model that for my daughter.
Not a perfect life.
Not a life built around someone else’s expectations.
A life that fits.
That search eventually became the work I now do with women every day.
A different way to navigate the midlife transition.
My work brings together modern neuroscience, emerging research on women’s midlife development, astrology, ancient wisdom traditions, and intuitive practices that help women reconnect with themselves.
Not because any one of those has all the answers.
But because together they help explain what so many women experience:
The feeling that the life that once fit no longer does.
If that’s where you find yourself, start with the guide.
It’s the resource I wish had existed when I began asking these questions myself.