Unravelling Circles
“Connection is why we’re here; it is what gives purpose and meaning to our lives.” ~ Brene Brown
“Connection is why we’re here; it is what gives purpose and meaning to our lives.” ~ Brene Brown
Few experiences cut deeper than feeling unseen - when your presence, your words, and your emotions pass unnoticed. It creates a quiet ache that slowly erodes your sense of belonging. But beneath that ache lies something universal: A deep human need - to be seen, to be heard, to be understood. Welcome home. You belong here.
In this Brave Space, we come home to ourselves:
Release. Soften. Let go
Emerge. Grow. Transform
Our Unraveling Circles are designed to nurture reflection and invite self-inquiry, while tending to the whole person – mind, body, heart, and spirit – through interactive, transformational experiences. Whether you join a one-off life-changing workshop or sign up for a 10-week immersive journey, the Circle supports you to accept and express your emotions, access the wisdom of your body, and integrate your past within a safe, held container – offering tools for self-discovery and personal growth.

Each circle is facilitated by a certified trauma-informed transformational coach. Sessions are 2 hours long, with 6- 12participants, creating an intimate and supportive space to unravel and integrate your inner wisdom.
The roots of restorative practice lie in ancient Indigenous traditions, grounded in the understanding that a thriving community is inherently interconnected. When harm occurs, it does not only affect those directly involved – it impacts the entire community. If that harm is not acknowledged and addressed through intentional conversation, community bonds begin to weaken. Greater harm can follow, and more frequently, unless the original rupture is tended to and repaired.
Unraveling Circles are rooted in this same understanding and draw on the African philosophy of Ubuntu – “I am because we are” – the understanding that our sense of self is shaped through our relationships with others. We understand that life happens, and our ways of being are shaped by our experiences. When left unexamined and unprocessed, they can get in the way of being fully present, influencing how we show up – how we live, lead, and parent – often passing these patterns on to the generations that follow.
From where it began
For over 20 years, I built a career in supply chain management. From the outside, I was accomplished. Reliable. Capable. Together.
But internally, something never settled. From a young age, I learned to be careful. There was little room for mistakes. Perfection became a way of staying safe, of being accepted, of being enough. Life became a quiet performance. I over-functioned. I held things together. I stayed dependable, even when it cost me myself. And still, it never felt like enough.
Like many of us, I carried patterns that were never truly mine. A deep drive for approval. A belief that worth had to be earned. I now understand this as trauma—not only in what happened, but in what didn’t: the safety, the attunement, the sense of being seen.

And so, I learned to disconnect. At some point, I believed something was fundamentally wrong with me, what I now recognize as shame. And shame doesn’t just make us doubt ourselves, it disconnects us from ourselves. I had become fluent in who I needed to be for others. But I had lost touch with whom I was underneath it all. That realization became a turning inward.
What began as a personal attempt to heal evolved into years of deep inner work—meeting what I had avoided, sitting with what I had carried, and slowly learning to see myself more clearly. Not through performance. Not through roles. But as I am. And in that process, something softened. I discovered I was not broken. I was disconnected. And slowly, I began to return.
Healing has taught me that authenticity matters more than perfection. That presence matters more than performance. That even in our imperfection, we remain deeply human—and deeply worthy of connection.
I still feel anxious at times. But I understand it differently now. Often, it simply means I care. My relationship with failure has softened too. It no longer defines me. It reminds me I am human. And being human is what makes connection possible.
Because we are not healed alone. We are shaped in relationship—and we are healed in relationship. Over time, this work has changed how I live, how I love, and how I show up as a parent, a daughter, a friend, and a sister.
It is still unfolding. Still becoming.
Unraveling Circles was born from this journey.
For those who look strong on the outside yet feel something missing within. For those who have spent years holding it together and are ready to stop performing. For those who are taking this journey alone, thinking it’s just them.
Unraveling Circles are safe and brave spaces where you can show up exactly as you are—and be met with compassion, not judgment.
Here, we don’t gather to fix ourselves.
We gather to unravel and see ourselves clearly—together.
This is not a space for fixing. It is a space for presence.
Sharing your story is not about retelling pain.
It is about restoring connection:
And in that restoration, something shifts, You begin to show up differently – softer, stronger, more open.
Because we don’t heal by fixing ourselves. We heal by being met—fully, humanly, safely.
When one person is met in their truth,They begin to accept themselves fully
And quietly, something else happens too:
And as Dr. Gabor Maté reminds us: “Safety is not the absence of threat; it is the presence of connection.”

We are wired for connection. It is a biological imperative. As Brené Brown writes: “Connection is the energy that exists between people when they feel seen, heard, and valued.”
From the moment we are born, we look to others for recognition. A simple moment of acknowledgment teaches us:
And yet, many of us move through life feeling invisible – at work, in relationships, even within families.
To be seen is to be recognized beyond roles, titles, or expectations.
It is someone noticing your essence – the subtle, human parts of you that rarely get named. And in that moment, something softens.
You’re allowed to rest in your own skin. To show up— authentically, imperfectly, fully.
To be heard is more than being listened to. It is being met with presence, curiosity, and care.
When you are not heard, you begin to withdraw.
You silence yourself.
You start to believe your voice doesn’t matter.
But when you are truly heard, something changes:
Your nervous system settles.
Your story finds space.
And a quiet truth emerges: “I matter.”
Being understood is that rare quiet, grounding moment of:
“You get me.”
It is when your words are met with empathy instead of judgment.
When you don’t have to over-explain.
When meaning is felt, not just heard.
Understanding creates real connection—
beyond roles, beyond language, into shared humanity.
Whether it’s about what happened to you, or the quiet absences
– what didn’t happen for you – you deserve to be seen.
Whether you were met by an empathetic witness, or had to find your own way through,
learning to quiet yourself just to keep the peace – this space is for you. We are here for you.
We hear both your spoken and unspoken words, the parts you’re still learning to be fluent in.
We understand your story. Because in your story, we hear our own, and are reminded that we are not alone.
When we feel safe enough to share our stories, those stories begin to loosen their grip on us –
making space to live more fully in the present, and to open ourselves to a life of joy, connection, and freedom.