The Quiet Work I Do

Alongside my work as a writer and content strategist, I also hold private healing sessions for individuals navigating periods of transition, emotional complexity, or creative change.

It’s work I’ve done quietly for years, usually through referrals and returning clients rather than formal promotion. Recently a few people have asked what actually happens in a session, so I thought I’d answer that question here.

Because the work is simple in structure, but often layered in experience.

What a Session Looks Like

Sessions begin with a short conversation. You might share what’s happening in your life, what feels unsettled, or simply that you feel something shifting and aren’t sure why.

From there, the session moves into a quiet healing process including Reiki and other healing modalities, using traditional hand placements while I observe what appears in the energetic field. Sometimes that includes physical sensations, sometimes symbolic imagery, and sometimes emotional patterns that seem ready to move. I am also a therapeutic psychic.

People experience this in different ways. Some feel deep physical relaxation. Others notice clarity arriving around situations that had felt tangled or heavy.

Often it’s both.

After the session, I typically write a short summary describing the themes and insights that emerged so clients can revisit them later.

What People Often Bring Into the Room

There’s no single reason people schedule a session. But certain themes show up frequently.

Life transitions — the end of relationships, career shifts, relocation, or the quiet sense that one chapter of life has closed and another hasn’t fully begun.

Emotional exhaustion — the feeling of carrying more than your system can comfortably process.

Creative thresholds — moments when someone knows they are meant to express something new but feels blocked or uncertain about how it will take shape.

And sometimes people simply arrive with curiosity. They feel something stirring beneath the surface of their lives and want space to listen more carefully.

What This Work Is & Isn’t

These sessions aren’t therapy or medical treatment, although what I do is complementary. Think of the work more as a reflective field. A place where the nervous system can settle, where intuitive perception becomes easier, and insights that are already present in the body and psyche can rise into awareness.

Some people interpret the experience in energetic or spiritual terms, and others simply experience it as deep listening.

Both are valid.

Why I Keep the Work Quiet

Unlike my content strategy work, which is public and structured around organizations and systems, these sessions are personal. They work best when approached with curiosity rather than expectation.

Because of that, most clients arrive through referral or through conversations that unfold naturally over time.

I’ve never felt a strong need to advertise the work widely.

But I do believe in answering honest questions when people ask them.

A Few Common Questions

Do I need to believe in energy healing?
No. Curiosity is enough. Some clients resonate with the energetic framework, while others experience the work simply as deep reflection.

What do people feel during a session?
Experiences vary widely: relaxation, emotional release, subtle physical sensations, or moments of insight that arrive unexpectedly.

Do sessions have to happen in person?
Not necessarily. Remote sessions can be just as effective because the work isn’t limited by physical proximity.

Will you tell me what’s going to happen in my life?
In a sense, yes. I work with you to set intentions aligned with your higher path.

When the Timing Feels Right

Most of the people who find their way to these sessions do so through quiet signals — a referral from someone they trust, a conversation that lingers, or the simple feeling that something in their life is shifting and deserves attention.

If you’re curious about the work or wondering whether a session might be helpful, you’re welcome to reach out.

Sometimes the first step is simply asking the question.

Ask About a Session

Next
Next

How to Feel and Hear Red Flags (in Real Time)