Why this work
matters to me.

I grew up surrounded by women. My mother had seven sisters. My father had three. I watched health patterns play out across all of them, saw things most people don't talk about.

One of my aunts couldn't have children. I watched that longing turn into a kind of anger that colored everything in her life. Another aunt battled severe hyperpigmentation, the kind that no cream or treatment could touch. My own mother fought her health struggles quietly, but she stayed active. Zumba was her joy. Dancing. Protein-balanced meals. She built her foundation without making a big deal about it.

When I was sixteen, just after my tenth-grade board exams, everything changed. My mother had a sudden paralysis attack. I still remember that day. She wasn't at the bus stop to pick me up like always. I came home and my father was silent, tense. We drove straight to the hospital.

Watching her in that hospital bed, unable to speak, her nervous system shut down, I was terrified I'd never get her back.

But then I watched something remarkable. Her recovery took two to three years. We found a neurosurgeon who understood neuroplasticity and mind-body connection before those words became trendy. My father became the anchor. Calm. Organized. Managing his own stress so he could hold space for hers. I learned about neuro research and nervous system regulation at sixteen because of them.

That experience taught me something I still carry. The body knows how to come back when it's actually supported. With the right foundation, the right support, and time.

I carried that into a career in DevOps, into long stretches of building and breaking things under pressure, and eventually into this work. I'm not here because health is trendy. I'm here because I've seen what happens when women finally stop fighting their bodies and start listening. I watched it in my mother's recovery. I observed it across generations of women in my family. I lived it through my own transformation.

Now I'm helping women in this generation break cycles that have been running in families for decades.

Based in the Austin Hill Country. Serving women locally and virtually.

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