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I didn’t come to this work through theory. I came through my body.

At twelve years old, I left home to train as a competitive synchronized swimmer. By thirteen, I was on my first national team. I learned early what it means to inhabit the body through precision, expression, and endurance. What high-performance sport also teaches you, quietly, is how to override signals—to push through and perform in spite of what you feel.

Injuries and health challenges interrupted that momentum. They brought me into a slower, more honest relationship with what I was carrying. The deeper questions that emerged—about identity, meaning, and what it truly means to inhabit oneself fully—became my actual path of learning. They never left. They became my work.

I trained as a massage therapist, then as an osteopath at the Collège d'Études Ostéopathiques de Montréal, eventually researching interpersonal skills in practice and teaching osteopathic education. For over five years, I have continued training in relational dynamics with the IRESOI Institute—learning to hold space for the complexity that lives beneath the surface.

My work today is the bridge where the body and the soul meet. I use the precision of my background to support a deeply intuitive process. Through resonant imagery and felt presence, I help you translate the intensity of symptoms and transitions into embodiment—finding solid ground within your own story.

What I have learned—through the water, the clinic, and the road of my own healing—is that our sensitivities are not our weaknesses. They are our deepest intelligence, waiting to be anchored and brought into mastery.

I believe that tending to our own story is a way of honoring life itself. When we connect to our inner healer and return to our core essence, we don't just find relief; we reclaim our capacity to be truly present.

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