Dear Friend,
Over the last few years, something exciting has happened.
What begins as a Sunday essay often turns into a conversation with you.
An email reply becomes a voice note. A voice note becomes a phone call. A quick check-in becomes an hour spent talking about work, relationships, purpose, leadership, grief, reinvention, or the strange and beautiful challenge of being human.
These conversations have become one of the most meaningful parts of my week.
Sometimes I’m helping someone navigating a career transition. Sometimes it’s a founder trying to build something ambitious without losing themselves in the process. Sometimes it’s a person standing at a crossroads, sensing that life is asking something of them but not yet knowing what. Sometimes it’s someone who, from the outside, appears to have everything together and yet can’t shake the feeling that something important is trying to get their attention.
Over the years, I’ve found myself in some wonderfully different rooms - dance studios, boardrooms, retreat centers, startup meetings, seminary classrooms, hospital rooms, and kitchen tables.
What fascinates me is that beneath the surface, people are often wrestling with the same questions:
Who am I becoming?
What matters most?
And how do I move forward without abandoning myself in the process?
Over time, I’ve realized that much of my life has been preparing me for exactly these kinds of conversations.
Not because I have all the answers (spoiler alert: I don’t).
Mostly because I’ve spent years swirling in and living into these questions.
Through movement and teaching. Through entrepreneurship and leadership. Through heartbreak and reinvention. Through building communities. Through two years of interfaith seminary and, more recently, ordination as an interfaith minister.
What I do best is help people listen for their own wisdom beneath the noise.
To slow things down enough to hear what’s actually happening.
To distinguish between fear and intuition.
To find clarity when everything feels tangled.
To reconnect with the part of themselves that already knows.
In many ways, this feels like an extension of what we’ve been doing together here every Sunday.
Paying attention.
Asking better, more beautiful questions.
Listening for what feels true.
So, I’m opening a small number of spaces for one-on-one work with me.
Sometimes it looks like coaching. Sometimes strategy. Sometimes spiritual direction. Sometimes leadership development. Sometimes simply creating enough space for someone to hear themselves think.
Mostly, it looks like you and me sitting together, cutting through the noise, in service of what really truly matters.
I’m intentionally keeping it small because this kind of work only works when I can bring my full attention and presence to it. As I build this next chapter of my life and work, I only have space for a handful of people.
The container is simple: one virtual session a week for three months.
The intention isn't to create dependency, but momentum. To give a question, transition, challenge, or calling enough space and consistency that something real can emerge - and then enough room afterward for that growth to become your own.
If something in you is stirring as you read this, I’d love to hear from you. We can start with a conversation and see whether it feels like a good fit for both of us. If it does, I’ll share more about the structure and investment.
Just send me a message, not doing any fancy forms or intake-anything, just shoot from the hip and tell me what’s alive in your world right now.
Let’s start there. I’m excited.
With love, always and in all ways,
Nat













