Grief changes over time, and the kind of support we need often changes with it. Whether you are in the earliest days of loss, navigating long-held grief, or seeking support for trauma that has resurfaced during life’s most difficult experiences, these offerings provide compassionate support for navigating life after profound loss and change.
Many people discover that grief does not arrive alone. Earlier experiences of trauma can resurface during loss, and the nervous system often carries both. Understanding this connection can help people approach grief with greater compassion for themselves and their bodies.
Personalized support for navigating grief, trauma, and life after profound loss.
Through my training with Stanford Medicine YogaX’s Holistic Health Coach program, I offer one-on-one guidance that integrates grief education with a whole-person approach to well-being. This evidence-informed training blends yoga philosophy, neuroscience, and behavioral psychology to support sustainable change.
These sessions support individuals who feel ready to gently care for their well-being while carrying grief.
Together we may explore:
Body-based practices designed to support the experience of grief.
Grief lives not only in the heart and mind, but also in the body. Grief Yoga and trauma-informed somatic practices offer compassionate ways to move, breathe, and release emotion in a safe and supportive environment.
These practices integrate breathwork, mindful movement, emotional expression, and nervous system awareness to help the body find moments of steadiness while honoring the experience of loss.
No prior yoga experience is necessary. These practices are gentle, accessible, and designed specifically for people navigating grief.
Sessions are offered as individual sessions, small group classes, or guided series.
Practices may include:
Personalized support for navigating grief, trauma, and life after profound loss.
Through my training with Stanford Medicine YogaX’s Holistic Health Coach program, I offer one-on-one guidance that integrates grief education with a whole-person approach to well-being. This evidence-informed training blends yoga philosophy, neuroscience, and behavioral psychology to support sustainable change.
These sessions support individuals who feel ready to gently care for their well-being while carrying grief.
Together we may explore:
I offer workshops, retreats, and speaking engagements that integrate lived experience, grief education, modern neuroscience, and body-based practices.
These programs create supportive environments where participants can deepen their understanding of grief, loss, and how these experiences affect the brain and body while exploring practices that support regulation and resilience.
Programs may include conference presentations, organizational trainings, community workshops, and experiential grief retreats.
Workshops may explore:
Individual sessions, classes, workshops, and speaking engagements are offered in a variety of formats. Fees vary depending on the type of session, program length, and organizational needs.
Limited sliding-scale spaces may be available.
I support people navigating many forms of grief and loss, including the death of a child, partner, parent, sibling, friend, or beloved pet. This can also include complicated or stigmatized losses such as suicide, overdose, or medically traumatic deaths.
Grief can also arise from many non-death losses, including the end of relationships, divorce, job loss, illness, identity changes, estrangement, and other major life transitions.
For many people, grief and loss can also bring earlier experiences of trauma to the surface, including childhood adversity or abuse. My work acknowledges the deep connection between grief, trauma, and the nervous system and offers compassionate practices that support healing and regulation.
Sessions are conversational and supportive. Depending on your needs, we may explore grief education, breathwork, gentle somatic practices, mindfulness, or grounding techniques that help regulate the nervous system.
You are always invited to participate at your own pace.
Somatic practices focus on the connection between the body, the nervous system, and our emotional experience. Grief is not only something we feel in the mind and heart—it is also carried in the body.
Grief Yoga and other gentle somatic practices may include breathing exercises, mindful movement, grounding techniques, and opportunities for safe emotional expression. These practices can help the nervous system find moments of steadiness while honoring the experience of grief.
No prior yoga experience is necessary, and participation is always optional.
No. I am a certified grief educator, grief movement guide, and Stanford Medicine YogaX–trained holistic health coach. My work focuses on grief education, nervous system awareness, and supportive practices that help people learn to carry grief and trauma in a sustainable way.
Yes. Sessions are offered virtually so people can participate from wherever they feel most comfortable.
Yes. I offer experiential presentations that blend lived experience, grief education, neuroscience, and somatic practices. These programs are designed for conferences, healthcare organizations, grief communities, and other groups seeking compassionate and science-informed approaches to grief and trauma.
Yes. One of the most hopeful truths about grief is that the human heart can hold more than one emotion at once. Over time, many people discover that moments of connection, gratitude, and even joy can return while love and grief remain present.
