Ethics & Care
This work is grounded in responsibility, respect, and care for the depth of what can emerge in healing spaces. Because this work can involve vulnerability, personal history, and the nervous system, how it is held matters as much as the practices themselves.
This work supports deep healing, the release of long-held patterns, and greater nervous-system regulation — in service of restoring a sense of agency, steadiness, and inner authority.
Rather than following a fixed method, we work slowly and attentively, listening to what is present and allowing each session to unfold responsively.
What informs this work
This practice is informed by Andean shamanic traditions, approached with humility, respect, and ongoing learning with teachers.
It is also shaped by Jungian psychology — particularly the relationship between the conscious and unconscious mind in the movement toward wholeness — as well as Buddhist teachings around presence, compassion, and ethical living.
These influences are held as living frameworks rather than belief systems, and the work is offered in a grounded, contemporary way that supports real life as it is lived.
Because this work involves trust, ethical practice is essential.
We commit to working with honesty, respect, and clear boundaries; to protecting your privacy; and to being transparent about the scope and limits of this role, including supporting you to seek other forms of help where appropriate.
The intention is not to fix or direct your life, but to support greater clarity, resilience, self-awareness, and self-trust.
This is slow, relational work, grounded in presence, respect, and care.