When everything is shifting — your work, your relationships, your sense of who you are — what you need more than answers is ground to stand on.
Most people in a major life transition are navigating it alone. Not because they don't have people in their life — but because the people in their life are either unable to witness what's actually happening, or too close to it to hold steady.
You need someone who isn't going to panic when you fall apart. A space that doesn't require you to have it together before you show up. And the strange, specific comfort of being around other people who are also mid-something — mid-dissolution, mid-rebuild, mid-reckoning — and choosing to stay conscious through it rather than numbing out or burning down.
I hold this space the way I learned to hold space — which is to say, not gently. Or not only gently. With the kind of honesty that comes from having been to the bottom and back. With enough presence to meet you in whatever's actually happening, not whatever you think you should be experiencing. With decades of study in somatic work, archetypal psychology, parts work, nervous system science, and the kind of embodied wisdom you only get from living through what most people only study theoretically.
The people who find their way here tend to be in one of a few places: a career that's dissolving or transforming. A relationship that's restructuring. A worldview cracking open — maybe around technology, maybe around parenting, maybe around the quiet realization that the life they built doesn't fit the person they're becoming. They're not broken. They're mid-passage. And the passage needs a container.
Each gathering follows what's alive in the room. Some months that's deep somatics. Some months it's strategic — building, launching, restructuring. Some months it's grief. Some months it's celebration. There's no syllabus because the work is the people who show up, and what they're carrying determines where we go.
What doesn't change: the quality of presence. The willingness to tell the truth. The knowing that you are held — even in the sessions you miss, even in the weeks between calls, even in the moments when you want to quit everything. The field holds.
If you're looking for something more intimate — private sessions, deep 1:1 work, a dedicated guide for your specific transition — The Signal might be a better fit. Some people start in The Ground and move into The Signal. Some do both. There's no wrong door.
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