Coaching for leaders ready to go deeper
Where leadership meets the soul
Most coaching stops at performance and spiritual work stops at the cushion.
This is for people whose lives ask for integration of both.
This is a rare work where three things meet: clarity about how leaders operate, somatic awareness that lands the work in the body, and contemplative depth underneath both.
People come here from different directions. Two are most common.
You lead.
And, from the outside, things look fine.
But you can feel the cost: in your sleep, your patience, the way certain decisions don't actually feel like yours. You may have tried executive coaching. It helped, but it stayed in your head. You're not looking for another framework. You're looking for a steady and integrated interior.
Your’e on a spiritual path.
You've been to retreats and have a regular practice.
And yet your daily life still has to work. The kids, the work, the body, the bills. What you may be looking for isn't more teaching. It's a way to bring what you already know into the spaces where you actually live.
What both paths share
Whether you arrived from a boardroom or a meditation retreat, the question underneath is the same: can I stay home in myself when life pulls hard?
My method weaves ancient practices, scientific awareness, and a gentle purification practice called Jyorei — in service of one outcome: a steady integrated center you can actually live from.
A discovery call is a 30-minute conversation. No pitch. We see if there's a fit.
When leadership starts to cost more than it gives
You don't relax anymore
1
You only stop working. Even when nothing's wrong, your body stays braced. Vacations don't quite reach you. You've forgotten what it feels like to be off-duty inside.
Performance fatigue sets in
2
24/7 you are in the "on” mode; it never shifts. You can do it indefinitely, and that's the problem. You're not sure who you are when no one is watching.
The reactive loop takes a toll
3
You're patient with the people who don't matter and short with the ones who do. Small things set you off. You catch yourself in tones you didn't choose.
You begin to miss out on your own life
4
The business and the numbers are great. And you're missing dinners, your kids' faces, the seasons changing, your own body. You've stopped being able to feel the absence.
You avoid being alone with yourself
5
Silence is uncomfortable. You reach for the phone, the next task, the next email because being with yourself without input has become unfamiliar.