THE WRITING · 500+ READERS
Essays on the interior life
THE THRESHOLD
Ice in the Body
On the silence women learn and what it does to them
APR 14, 2026
THE THRESHOLD
Knowing Is Not Enough
Anxiety, dissociation, and the fear beneath the fear
MAY 19, 2026
THE RECLAIM
I Bow Because I Want To
Patriarchy, pain, and the bodies that paid for it
MAY 07, 2026
THE RECLAIM
He Cheated. He Left. This Is What I Know, 5 Years Later.
What grief sounds like when it learns to sing
JAN 04, 2026
THE PATTERN
They Called It Fine. My Body Disagreed.
On the anger that knows before you do
MAR 29, 2026
THE PATTERN
The Sadness of Not Being Able to Stay Without Becoming Smaller
On freedom, and the relief of being no one's obligation
JAN 30, 2026
WHY I WRITE
Writing shoots an arrow straight into your heart.
It opens you, shows you your wounds, brings you back to what's alive in you. Meet your truth here, and you stop performing a life that was never yours.
Psychologist James Pennebaker found that expressive, autobiographical writing about what hurts measurably lowers anxiety, blood pressure, and depression. He showed that the people who actually heal are the ones who use the writing to make meaning, not just to vent. Dan McAdams calls it narrative identity: we become whole by telling our lives as a story, finding the thread. Turning what happened to us into who we are.
Will writing answer every question you've carried? No. Not all of them. But it brings you closer to home.
Write yourself into being.
Write about your dreams. And those damn desires you never let yourself say out loud.
It took me years of journalling every morning before I could give myself permission to admit that creativity, singing, writing, are what I crave most. Another two years before I was brave enough to bring it into my work.
Hold onto your pen. It keeps you steady.
I'm inviting you in. Read, and find yourself in the words. And when you're standing at the edge, ready to set down the first tentative words, know you're in good company. Come to one of my sessions for the nudge, the guidance, the company for when something opens. Writing is delicate. It's slow, it takes its time to unravel. But it's yours, and it's your own wisdom asking to come in.
While you sketch those messy feelings onto the page, let yourself feel.