I walk with you through transitions that challenge your sense of identity and worth, helping you face the unknown with curiosity, courage, and centeredness.
In today's world, if you need a place to process your thoughts, AI is available around the clock and
remarkably good at it. If you need accountability, there are apps and friends who can keep you on track.
Here, you can find all of that plus a space where you are truly heard, not just in what you say
but in who you are. Where the person across from you has walked her own transformation and can meet you
where you are, with the kind of love that doesn't comfort you into staying the same, but calls you toward
who you're becoming.
If something in this resonates, a short call is a good place to start.
A professional wanting clarity and effectiveness
A leader wanting to understand their impact on their team's field
A person standing at the threshold of a deeper question about who they are
"I've built a successful life and still have the feeling that something is fundamentally missing."
When something is fundamentally missing, something fundamental needs to change. Is that the move from an outward orientation to an inward one?
"I know I need to slow down. I just don't know how to do it without everything falling apart."
Sometimes when things feel like they are falling apart, they are in fact falling into place. The work is to remove everything that stands in the way of your trust in the natural unfoldment of your life.
"I lead a large, complex team. I want to connect more effectively with my direct reports and the broader organization."
What if connecting more effectively asked something more real of you — the courage to say the difficult thing, and the willingness to stay present with whatever arises?
"I present with confidence. But inside I'm always asking: what if I'm not actually as good as they think?"
You've most likely outgrown the story you carry about yourself. Impostor syndrome dissolves when you identify less with who you think you are — and more with who you actually are.
"I'm caught between leadership that can't give me clarity and people who need it from me."
You're in the middle, facing a very painful paradox in organizational life. What would it mean to let this paradox be your teacher rather than your obstacle?
"The world is changing faster than I can keep up. I don't know where I stand anymore."
Before you knew where you stood — in roles, in certainty, in a world that made sense — was there something in you that existed independent of all that?
"The future belongs not to those who know the most,
but to those who are most fully, coherently themselves." — Maria-Magdalena
This is what becomes possible when you stop looking outward for answers and turn toward yourself with love and curiosity.
Are you aware of a voice inside that never quite stops?
It comments on what you do, how you look, what you said in that meeting, how you compared to the person
next to you. It arrives before you have finished a sentence and delivers its verdict before you have had
a chance to feel anything.
By recognizing, understanding, and moving beyond the grip of your inner judge, more energy and
creativity are released. Your life has room for more spontaneity and you will feel free to express your
unique self.
Our emotions influence our critical thinking, decision-making, leadership, and, of course our relationships. They are rarely just a response to the present moment; they are echoes of past experiences. Reactive patterns cannot be overridden by willpower alone. By bringing more awareness, we develop the capacity to pause — to notice what is arising, and in that noticing, create a small but decisive gap between stimulus and response. That gap is where choice and emotional wisdom lives.
Have you ever faced a situation where the usual answers didn't fit — where the complexity was too layered, the stakes too high, and the noise too loud to hear your own thinking? In those moments, most people look outward. More advice, more frameworks, more opinions. But the clearest path through complexity rarely comes from outside. My invitation is to take a deep breath, reconnect with your own intuition, and navigate ambiguity from a place of trust and inner guidance.
Strategic insight is the capacity to see beneath the surface of a situation, to perceive patterns, root causes, and opportunities that others miss. It moves beyond information and analysis into genuine understanding of what is actually at stake and why. With strategic insight, decisions become less reactive and more grounded, because they arise from clarity rather than pressure. It allows you to anticipate consequences, recognize the right moment to act, and distinguish what matters from what merely feels urgent.
Executive presence is what people feel when you walk into a room before you say a word. It is the quiet authority that comfort others in uncertainty, that makes people lean in rather than look away. It is not performance — it is the natural result of knowing who you are, what you value, and being willing to stand there fully. With it, difficult conversations become possible, hard decisions become clearer, and the people around you feel both challenged and held. It is, at its core, the art of being so genuinely yourself that others find their own center in your presence.
By realizing that everything you were searching for is already inside you, true fulfillment is attained. You become genuine and meet life in a genuine way. You move beyond the continuous pendulum of avoiding pain and seeking pleasure. You live your life according to your own truth, your actions are aligned with your values, work starts carrying meaning beyond output, relationships holding more depth, and a sense of purpose even in difficulty. You have a sense of being enough, and finally feeling at home in yourself.
I made my childhood passion my first profession and started working as a software developer while still a student at university. Soon I was offered leading roles, and spent years inside fast-growing technology companies leading innovative projects, designing processes and developing people. Technically productive. Professionally successful. After a while I realise that something essential was missing, not in what I was building, but in who I was becoming in the process.
That recognition sparked my search. With the guidance of my coaching teacher, I began turning inward, and what I was uncovering, I started to share. For nearly two decades I have worked with professionals and leaders internationally, using the challenges of their working lives as the terrain for a much deeper inquiry: who are you beneath the role? What holds when the certainty dissolves? How do you lead authentically, your own life and your team?
I am also a long-term contemplative practitioner, and this is not separate from the work. It shapes the quality of attention I bring, the depth I can hold, the presence I can offer when a client's world is coming undone.
This work is not about fixing what is broken. It is about finding what was always there - beneath the role, the performance, the strategy and the accumulated identity, and learning to act from that authentic place.
We work with what is actually alive in your working life: the pressures, the transitions, the questions that won't stay quiet. These become the entry point to the inner process that results in long-lasting change. Online and in-person.
Facilitation and coaching for teams that want to function at a level most teams never reach — where trust is real, where people bring their actual selves, where disagreement is generative rather than destructive. Rooted in one consistent finding: coherence precedes excellence. Online and in-person.
Three to five days of deep, uninterrupted work in the Bavarian Alps, away from the noise of ordinary life. One-on-one coaching woven together with reflection time and walks in nature, in a rhythm that allows something to settle and open. You leave with new lenses on yourself, on your situation, on what matters. And a clarity about next steps that is yours, not prescribed.
A small group of like-minded professionals meeting online, gathered by a shared desire to work on what actually matters. Not a course, not a seminar — a living container where real questions get real attention. Each participant brings their own situation. What emerges belongs to everyone. Online.
Coaching is easier to experience than to explain. But here are some questions I can answer.
"Inner work is a process of remembering what we have forgotten and learning what we still don't know." - A.H. Almaas
Testimonials shared with permission. Some names withheld to preserve confidentiality.
A discovery session is a free, no-obligation 30-minute conversation.
We explore where you are and what you're reaching for. You get a felt sense of how this work moves and
whether it is right for you.