What else do I offer
These practices are offered as standalone services or, when appropriate, as supportive care alongside end-of-life doula work.
Each is grounded in presence, consent, and respect for individual needs, boundaries, and circumstances.
Advanced Care Planning
Advanced care planning is offered as a standalone service for adults who want support thinking through values, wishes, and practical decisions related to healthcare, aging, illness, or death — regardless of current health status.
This work may include identifying a healthcare agent, discussing preferences around life-sustaining care, and exploring decisions that often feel overwhelming when made in crisis. It can also include personal elements, such as choosing music, photographs, clothing, or rituals that reflect how someone wishes to be remembered.
Many people expect to navigate these choices as circumstances arise, but doing so while coping with illness, decline, or grief can be difficult. Advanced care planning offers space to approach these conversations proactively, at a pace that feels manageable and supportive. This work is relational, consent-based, and guided by what feels relevant in the moment.
Reiki & Shamanic Energy Work
Reiki and shamanic energy work are offered as an integrated, gentle, and consent-based practice. Reiki forms the energetic foundation of each session and is often sought for stress reduction, easing anxiety, promoting relaxation, supporting pain management, and fostering a sense of grounded calm. Sessions are quiet and may involve light touch or hands-off work, depending on individual preference.
Shamanic influences from the Peruvian Laika lineage may inform how sessions unfold, shaping intention, pacing, and focus. This work is approached as collaborative and presence-based, guided by comfort and what feels supportive in the moment. It may be accessed on its own or alongside other forms of care.
Shamanic Influences
This work is also informed by training in the Peruvian Laika shamanic lineage. For those who are curious about this framework, sessions may include symbolic or relational practices such as illumination, chakra-focused work, energetic boundary clearing, or ancestral exploration.
These practices are used as supportive frameworks for reflection and meaning-making, not to define or interpret a person’s experience. Engagement is guided by consent, comfort, and individual beliefs. This work is offered as spiritual care and does not replace medical or mental health support.
Yoga Nidra
Yoga Nidra, often called “yogic sleep,” is a guided meditation practice that supports deep rest and nervous-system regulation. It is practiced lying down or in a comfortable position and does not require movement, flexibility, or prior yoga experience.
Many people seek Yoga Nidra to support sleep, ease anxiety, or create calm during periods of stress, illness, or transition. Sessions are gently guided and adapted to individual needs. Yoga Nidra may be offered on its own, alongside end-of-life or harm reduction support, or as preparation for energy-based work. It is available in person or remotely and does not require any spiritual framework.
Space & Home Energy Cleansing
Space and home energy cleansing is offered as a supportive practice for tending to environments during periods of transition, stress, illness, or change. This work may be sought before, during, or after major life events, including illness, dying, death, ceremonies, relocation, or when a space no longer feels settled.
This approach emphasizes attunement, intention, and care for the space itself. Practices may include sound healing, smudging, and other energy-based or ritual supports to encourage clarity, grounding, and ease. Each experience is unique and adapted to the needs of the space and the people within it.
Harm Reduction Support
Harm reduction support is offered for individuals navigating substance use, recovery, ambivalence about change, or the impacts of trauma, stress, and systemic harm.
This work is informed by lived experience and ongoing practice, and is grounded in respect, autonomy, and dignity. Support does not require abstinence, readiness, or a specific goal. It centers safety, agency, and practical strategies to reduce risk, isolation, and harm.
Support may include nonjudgmental listening, resource navigation, education when requested, and space to reflect on safety, boundaries, and care. The pace and focus are shaped collaboratively, without pressure to change or perform progress.
Animal Support
Support is offered for animals during illness, aging, active dying, or periods of transition, as well as for the people who love and care for them.
This work is guided by calm presence, observation, and respect for the animal’s comfort and boundaries. Sessions are paced according to the animal’s responses rather than a fixed approach.
Reiki-informed support may be offered to promote relaxation and comfort. Presence-based support for caregivers may also be included, especially during end-of-life or anticipatory grief. This work is donation-based, and cost will not be a barrier. It is offered as a complementary practice and does not replace veterinary care.
“She is deeply intuitive and always seemed to know exactly what I needed in the moment, whether through breath, movement, or energy work. She always had the perfect lesson prepared.”