These are not clinical therapy sessions, nor are they executive coaching or supervision in the traditional sense. Our one-to-one spaces are relational, reflective, and anchored in ethical inquiry. They’re designed for practitioners, facilitators, educators, artists, carers — anyone holding complex roles in complex times — who need somewhere to pause, metabolise, and re-orient. Whether you’re sitting with vocational grief, institutional harm, or quiet questions about next steps, we meet you in the in-between.
More and more people are working in contexts that don’t have language for what they carry — or space to hold it. Supervision can feel too clinical. Therapy can feel too historical. Coaching too goal-driven. What many need is a space that’s relational, slow, attuned — grounded in narrative, ethics, and a sense of personal-political entanglement. These sessions create that space: for what’s unresolved, unspoken, or just quietly weighing.
Tone-wise, you can expect a space that’s warm, rigorous, and gently confrontational — where your story and your context are held together, not separated out.
(These are not prescriptive but gently indicative)
ethical accompaniment · slow supervision · narrative self-inquiry · trauma-aware · decolonial lens · diasporic practice · neurodivergent-friendly · reflective practice
The body—our body—is where trauma is held. But it’s also where our resilience lives.
Resmaa Menakem, My Grandmother’s Hands