About

I’m a psycho-spiritual practitioner, facilitator, and tarot reader, working with reflective practices that support clarity, self-trust, and conscious decision-making.

At the heart of my work is an interest in meaning-making: how we understand our lives, our choices, and the patterns we find ourselves moving within. I work with tarot as a symbolic language that helps illuminate inner landscapes and open thoughtful conversation, particularly at moments of transition, uncertainty, or change.

My approach

My approach is grounded, relational, and ethically held. Tarot, as I work with it, is a reflective and psycho-spiritual practice rather than a belief system or a set of answers to follow. Sessions and group spaces are held as conversations: opportunities to explore what is present, what may be asking for attention, and how you might move forward with greater clarity and self-stewardship.

I’m attentive to the dynamics that can arise in spiritual and inner work — including projection, power, and authority — and I work consciously to keep the focus on your own sense-making rather than interpretation imposed from outside. Good spiritual work, for me, is work that leaves people feeling more connected to themselves, not less.

Care, consent, and appropriate boundaries sit at the centre of everything I offer.

 

Experience, training, and study

I’ve been working with the tarot for over 25 years, beginning in my teens and deepening through long-term personal practice, professional work, and formal training. I hold a Diploma in Professional Tarot Reading from the London College of Psychic Studies, alongside counselling training and ongoing study in psycho-spiritual care.

My academic background includes a BA in History of Art and Archaeology from SOAS University of London, with a focus on spiritual and symbolic traditions. More recently, my postgraduate study began within the MA in Magic and Occult Science at the University of Exeter, where I explored magic, ritual, and meaning-making in contemporary contexts. My academic focus then evolved toward the clinical, cultural, and ethical dimensions of altered states and care, leading me to continue my studies within the MSc Psychedelics, Mind, Medicine and Culture programme at Exeter.

Taken together, these strands of lived practice, training, and study inform my interest in how inner work sits within wider cultural, psychological, and ethical landscapes.

Working with groups, events and communities

Alongside one-to-one sessions, I work within group, festival, and community settings. This includes facilitating workshops, holding reflective and psycho-spiritual spaces, contributing to panel discussions, and supporting the design and programming of events and gatherings.

I have experience working within large and small-scale cultural spaces where care, inclusivity, and responsibility are essential, and I’m particularly interested in how spiritual and reflective practices can be held well in public, communal contexts.

Across these settings, my focus is on creating containers that feel grounded, humane, and alive — spaces where people can explore meaning without pressure, performance, or hierarchy.

I’m drawn to work that sits close to lived experience – the kind that doesn’t rush to make sense of things, but allows space for what’s complex, unresolved, or still forming.

Whether working privately or in shared settings, I care about creating conditions where people can think, feel, and speak honestly without pressure.

If you’re exploring working together, whether through one-to-one sessions, group work, events, or shared projects, you’re welcome to reach out.

I’m always interested in thoughtful collaborations and I particularly love spaces that value the raw and the real.