I have become a curator of what works in transcending childhood wounds and reclaiming wholeness. The Transformational Mastermind embodies the modalities and practices I discovered on my own journey—from dysfunctional, co-dependent, and unhappy, to a life filled with purpose, connection, and love.
Like many seekers, I read all the self-help books, spent years in therapy, and followed gurus who promised they could “fix me.” I dissected my past like a forensic detective, searching for clues about why I felt lost, numb, anxious, and stuck.
And still, after all of that, I wondered why healing hadn’t made me whole.
Can you relate?
Here’s the idea that changed everything: what if the most powerful healing tool isn’t in your past, but in your future?
This Mastermind is not about dwelling on what’s behind you. It’s about transformation through commitment to what lies ahead. It is a journey of experiences, practices, energy work, and shamanic rituals that reconnect you to your true self and remove barriers to creating a life you love. It is for the seekers exhausted by self-improvement, for those tired of “fixing” and ready to live.
The Psychology Behind This Journey
Modern psychology often focuses on pain. Healing is framed as retelling our stories, reliving trauma, and labeling ourselves through diagnoses. Awareness is powerful—naming our wounds matters—but in focusing so much on what’s broken, we often forget to build what’s whole.
This is where the work of Alfred Adler comes in.
Adler, a contemporary of Freud, held a radically different vision of human psychology. While Freud believed the mind was dominated by past trauma and unconscious drives, Adler believed people are creators of their futures. He saw human suffering not as pathology, but as the pain of being disconnected from purpose, community, and courage.
He believed the answer was not endless excavation of the past, but choosing to aim forward, to strive, and to live. For Adler, the essential questions were:
- What is the purpose of your life?
- Who are you becoming?
- How can you contribute to the world around you?
His vision was not just about coping—it was about creating. Not just surviving—it was about rising, reclaiming courage, belonging, and living for something greater than yourself.
Adler’s voice was overshadowed in his time, but more than a century later, his perspective feels more urgent than ever.
My Influences and Integration
Adler’s work was one piece of the puzzle for me—the spark that unlocked my heart and awakened me to my true self. But there were others who shaped my path: Christopher Duncan, Florence Shinn, Neville Goddard, Michael Singer, William Whitecloud, Beata Afoldi, my Native American medicine people and so many more.
From them, I gleaned insights and practices. But beyond the books and seminars, it was the processes, meditations, energy practices, and spiritual journeys that truly brought me home.
Through these tools, I learned to live as a master creator—a woman accepted, loved, and appreciated for herself, free to live with passion and full creative expression.
No, I’m not perfect. And that’s the point. Wholeness doesn’t mean perfection. It means living courageously, authentically, and joyfully.
An Invitation
The path I’ve curated in this Mastermind is designed to reconnect you with your authentic self, your higher self. It is about knowing yourself as whole and complete, reclaiming courage, belonging, and stepping into the life you were meant to live.
This isn’t self-improvement. This is self-creation.

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