Hi there.
I'm Hannah, a deep feeler in a re-membering process of coming home.
I hold space for people to journey home to self and mother earth through feeling, rest, and connection.
A tender heart gardener who supports soul rooting in the rich soil of each person’s intrinsic wisdom, I feel deeply and unapologetically and invite others to feel their way home to their true nature through embodied connection with self, community, and mother earth. I am inspired by the realms beyond name and form as well as the Ponderosas, deer, birds, and mice with whom I live.
I hold a Masters in Social Work degree from Columbia University and an Advanced Ecotherapy Certificate from Pacifica Graduate Institute. I am also a Yoga Nidra teacher, chef, and former educator. Regardless of what hat I’m wearing, my roots are planted in the world of spiritual ecology, having completed several courses through Emergence Magazine.
That being said, life has been my greatest guide beyond any course or degree. These days, I co-create containers rooted in reciprocity with the more-than-human world and support individuals & groups in following the threads that bring us home.
Born firmly rooted in the world of name and form,
I grew up chasing the tail of convention (although my parents might disagree). Over time, I started hearing the whispers of heart over the expectations of society. Through many stumbles and heartache, I continued to follow my intuition as I reoriented from “should” to soul.
As I followed these threads all over the world, my longing for depth and connection revealed itself to me time and time again. The more I turned towards it, the more at home I felt – in self, community, and mother earth.
These days, I follow the threads of my inner landscape and draw inspiration from the wild roots of soul.
I am often wandering forests of ponderosa pine and reading poems to mountains, asking “questions that can make or unmake a life” (David Whyte). Dedicated to stillness, softness, and quiet, I am rebuilding my relationship with rest & ritual one practice at a time.
“Everything has its own voice to make itself heard... You can belong to everything simply by listening.”
David Whyte