These sessions combine body psychotherapy, meditation, and embodiment. I support you in experiencing inner stillness and connectedness and finding healing within yourself. This allows you to come home to yourself and step fully into life.

These sessions combine body psychotherapy, meditation, and embodiment. I support you in experiencing inner stillness and connectedness and finding healing within yourself. This allows you to come home to yourself and step fully into life.


My work is based on the realization that we are essentially whole and intact, but that injuries and traumas cause us to lose touch with our dimension of being and connectedness. To me, healing means remembering our essence of wholeness and consciousness and embodying it as human beings. I support you in anchoring yourself in your body and beingness, as well as in recognizing and healing limiting patterns and traumas. In this way, I support you in finding greater wholeness, inner peace, and fulfillment in being human —an embodied spirituality.
We can open ourselves to our formless, spiritual dimension and awaken to the stillness that has always been there—the ground of our being. In spiritual teachings, this is also called Buddha nature or self. Experiencing our dimension of being is deeply nourishing. It allows us to come into deep contact with ourselves. Anchored in our body and in our beingness, we find inner stability. An awake hereness and being present with what is become possible.
On our path to inner freedom and wholeness, it can be important to turn toward our inner shadows. Anchored in a space of loving acceptance and stillness, it becomes easier to feel our pain and open ourselves to the patterns and traumas that hold us back and limit us. This creates space for inner freedom and lightness. In deep contact with ourselves, we experience natural qualities of our being, such as love, joy, inner power, and clarity. We feel whole, grounded, and at home within ourselves. We feel connected to the people and environment around us—without losing ourselves. We open ourselves to the possibility of living from the vastness of our being and flowing with life.
I support you in integrating spiritual awakening and embodying it in your daily life. In my understanding, the spiritual path consists of two “movements”: the movement toward consciousness, the realization of our essence and dimension of being on the one hand (awakening – being stillness). The movement toward being human on the other hand (healing and embodying – being love). This includes bringing the light of consciousness and love into our humanness. In this way, we become alive expressions of stillness and love. On the spiritual path, it can therefore be important to bring light into the darkness of our patterns and traumas. Because they are what separate us from a deeper perception of our wholeness or prevent us from living our deepest truth in everyday life.

As a trained Hakomi therapist, I completed a three-year training program in mindful somatic body psychotherapy, which included extensive self-experience and intensive supervision. I continue to participate in regular supervision sessions in order to reflect on my practice from a professional perspective and to continuously develop my skills.
I am also a teacher of nondual meditation, embodiment and yoga as well as a Senior Realization Process Teacher. I have devoted my entire adult life to the realms of awakening, spirituality, healing, and embodiment.