
About
Grief and bereavement changes everything—how we move through the day, how we understand ourselves, how we imagine the future.
My work is about meeting you exactly where you are in that changing landscape, with steadiness, compassion, and respect. I hold a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology and an Honours degree in Philosophy, a combination that shapes both how I listen and how I think. Psychology grounds my work in evidence‑informed care; philosophy keeps me attentive to meaning, values, identity, and the big questions that grief inevitably raises. I have completed specialized training through Hospice and hold a Certificate in Death, Dying, and Bereavement.
I support people navigating many forms of loss—death, anticipatory grief, complicated or disenfranchised grief, and the quieter losses that arrive with life transitions, illness, or changing relationships. Our work together is paced, collaborative, and centred on what feels most supportive for you. I have lived in Warkworth for over ten years, and I value the groundedness and sense of connection that comes from working within a small community. Grief is personal. Therapy should be too. If you’re considering reaching out, you don’t need to have the right words or a clear plan—just a willingness to begin.