
Why Anxiety Isn’t “Just in Your Head” — And How Hypnosis Can Help Create Lasting Change
Anxiety is one of the most common reasons people reach out for support, yet it can still feel incredibly isolating when you’re living with it.
For some people, anxiety feels loud and obvious — racing thoughts, panic, difficulty sleeping, constant worry. For others, it is quieter, hidden beneath being capable, organised and “holding it all together”. Sometimes it shows up as ‘being really prepared’. It can show up as overthinking, emotional exhaustion, irritability, difficulty relaxing, people-pleasing, perfectionism, or simply feeling like you never truly switches off.
Many people tell me they’ve spent years trying to “manage” their anxiety. They’ve tried to think their way out of it, push through it, distract themselves from it, or convince themselves they should just be coping better.
The difficulty is that anxiety is rarely just a thinking problem.
Often, anxiety is something that has become deeply patterned within the nervous system and subconscious mind. Clients often explain in exasperation that they know logically that they ‘shouldn’t’ be worrying/overthinking/stressed, etc, but the feelings are there anyway.
That’s where approaches like hypnotherapy and strategic psychotherapy can be incredibly helpful.
Understanding Anxiety Differently
One of the most important things I help clients understand is that anxiety is not weakness, failure, or a lack of resilience.
Anxiety is often a pattern that we learned and ingrained at a time when it was needed, that hasn’t updated as we have grown and learned more. It becomes part of our subconscious, and our nervous system.
Over time, experiences, stress, overwhelm, emotional pressure and learned patterns can teach the brain and body to stay alert, prepared and vigilant. The mind begins scanning for problems before they happen. The body stays activated. Rest becomes difficult. Even small things can begin to feel mentally and emotionally exhausting.
This is why many people with anxiety say things like:
- “I can’t switch my brain off.”
- “I’m exhausted all the time.”
- “I overthink everything.”
- “I feel on edge even when things are okay.”
- “I know I shouldn’t be stressed, but I still feel stressed.”
These patterns are not imagined. They are real responses within the brain and nervous system.
The encouraging thing is that patterns can change. We can, and do, learn new things each day, and this is no exception.
How Hypnosis Can Help Anxiety
When someone experiences ongoing anxiety, the subconscious mind often becomes conditioned to expect stress, danger or overwhelm. This can create automatic emotional and physiological responses that continue even when the person consciously wants things to feel different.
Hypnotherapy can help by:
- interrupting repetitive anxiety patterns
- reducing emotional intensity
- strengthening feelings of safety and calm
- supporting emotional regulation
- helping the mind develop new responses and associations
Many clients also find that hypnosis creates something they may not have experienced in a long time — a genuine sense of mental quietness and physical calm.
Why Lasting Change Often Requires More Than “Coping Strategies”
Coping strategies can absolutely be useful. Breathing exercises, mindfulness, movement and self-care all have value. I will work with you to create your own tool box of these strategies to help interrupt the patterns that are causing you problems.
But many people become frustrated because they are doing all the “right things” and still feel anxious underneath it all.
This is often because anxiety is not only happening at the surface level of conscious thought. It can also involve deeply established subconscious patterns, nervous system responses and emotional conditioning developed over many years.
Research increasingly supports the connection between the brain, body and nervous system in anxiety responses, and approaches that combine psychological understanding with nervous system regulation and subconscious change can be particularly effective for many people.
Studies have shown hypnotherapy may help reduce symptoms of anxiety, stress and emotional distress, particularly when used alongside evidence-based therapeutic approaches. Many people also report improvements in sleep, emotional regulation, confidence and overall wellbeing.
Importantly, effective support is rarely about applying a one-size-fits-all technique.
Each person experiences anxiety differently. For some, anxiety is connected to overwhelm and burnout. For others, it may relate to past experiences, perfectionism, uncertainty, emotional overload, self-pressure or chronic stress.
Understanding the individual pattern matters.
Anxiety Can Change
One of the hardest parts of anxiety is that it can begin to feel like “this is just who I am”.
But anxiety is not your identity.
Patterns that have been learned can also be unlearned. The nervous system can become calmer. The mind can become quieter. It is possible to feel more emotionally steady, more present, and less consumed by constant mental and emotional noise.
Change does not usually happen through criticism or forcing yourself to “just stop worrying”. More often, it happens through understanding, safety, awareness and creating new experiences within the mind and nervous system over time.
And while that process looks different for everyone, many people find enormous relief in discovering that they do not have to stay stuck in survival mode forever.
About the Author
Theresa is a Clinical Hypnotherapist and Strategic Psychotherapist based in Canberra, working with clients both in person and online through her practice, Navigating Calm. She helps people create lasting positive change by breaking free from unhelpful patterns and reconnecting with calm, clarity, and confidence.
If you’re ready to take the next step towards lasting change in your life, get in touch today to book an appointment.

Finding Inner Peace: Calming the Busy Mind Through Awareness and Creativity
When I ask clients what they want to achieve, change, or seek, a common answer is peace. What’s interesting is that what peace looks like is different for each person—deeply personal, shaped by their own experiences and circumstances. The word peace gets bandied about in many contexts: the classic wish for world peace, the association with peace and quiet, the 1970s hippy expression “peace, man”… and so on.
For many clients, though, the peace they’re talking about is an inner quiet. It’s the ability to let go of busy thoughts, to soften the sense of overwhelm that comes from juggling too many perceived balls in the air, and from holding long mental lists of things they’re trying to remember. In this context, peace is really about being able to guide your thoughts—focusing on what genuinely needs your attention, while allowing the rest to gently slide away. Peace means calming the brain.
Over the past week or so, I’ve been sharing short clips on Instagram that invite the viewer to pause for a moment. Stopping to observe something in your everyday surroundings—stepping outside to notice the wind moving through the grass, a rabbit nibbling on a leaf, or ants busily scurrying about—can help clear the mind, create a sense of peace, and allow you to breathe out. I encourage you to test it out. Find something you can observe, even for just 20 seconds, and notice how becoming absorbed in a small detail can begin to clear the busyness of your mind. (I can also confirm that wandering outside to capture these moments on film is delightfully soothing!)
The prompt for this week’s creative practice, as part of the #navigatingcreativity series, is Peace. Whether you use it as inspiration to draw, paint, compose, write, dream, or photograph, I invite you to enjoy using your brain creatively—supporting neuroplasticity, taking time for yourself, and finding your own version of peace.
About the Author
Theresa is a Clinical Hypnotherapist and Strategic Psychotherapist based in Canberra, working with clients both in person and online through her practice, Navigating Calm. She helps people create lasting positive change by breaking free from unhelpful patterns and reconnecting with calm, clarity, and confidence.
If you’re ready to take the next step towards lasting change in your life, get in touch today to book an appointment.

When You Feel Stuck: Rewiring Patterns Through Awareness and Creativity
Clients often come to see me when they feel stuck. That sense of being stuck shows up differently for everyone, but it tends to share some common threads: feeling unable to change, struggling to move out of patterns that are harmful—or at the very least, not helpful.
At the core of so many of these experiences is the belief that we can’t change. This belief often develops through a kind of mis-wiring along the way. When we start to believe that we can’t shift our perception, change our patterns, or even let go of certain thoughts, it usually comes from the mistaken idea that we have no control over our thoughts and feelings.
One of the most effective ways to reconnect with our capacity to change is to test it out—and create proof for ourselves that change is possible. A simple task I often suggest is choosing what you will notice each day.
If you feel stuck in a negative mindset, you might intentionally notice three positive things during the day. If anxiety feels like a constant companion, you might look for three moments when anxiety isn’t present. That could be a feeling of contentment, delight, or feeling valued—whatever fits. When you deliberately set out to notice something, you’re far more likely to see it than when you tell yourself it never happens.
So, what can you set out to see today?
Another way to support our ability to change is by engaging the brain creatively. This week, I’m adding the prompt ‘water’ to the #navigatingcreativity program. How might you explore this creatively? Will you write a poem, draw a picture, take a photo, create a water scene, or even sculpt using water?
The possibilities are limited only by your imagination. Enjoy the process—and take a moment to admire whatever you create.
About the Author
Theresa is a Clinical Hypnotherapist and Strategic Psychotherapist based in Canberra, working with clients both in person and online through her practice, Navigating Calm. She helps people create lasting positive change by breaking free from unhelpful patterns and reconnecting with calm, clarity, and confidence.
If you’re ready to take the next step towards lasting change in your life, get in touch today to book an appointment.

Coffee, Creativity and the Curious Brain
Last week, I floated the idea of using our brain in a creative way to support neuroplasticity — helping to maintain the adaptability of our brain, our mindset, and our perception. I shared the first prompt: green.
It sparked ideas, opened up conversations, and even led to some creative output. I picked up coloured pencils and played with drawing a potted plant, and felt that quiet joy that comes from mixing colours, noticing details, and exploring ideas without an agenda.
This week’s prompt is coffee — whether that’s the colour, the beverage, or even the plant. How might you use this prompt to be creative? A poem, a picture, a cake…?
If you feel inspired, please share and use #navigatingcreativity so we can enjoy the process of creating and using our brains together.
This idea of allowing time for creativity has sparked some interesting conversations. Some people see creative time as non-productive, while others see it as essential. Some experience it as hard because the outcome isn’t what they hoped for; others see it as an opportunity to learn, experiment, and grow.
Ultimately, it comes down to the meaning we attach to the time, the process, and the product. How might you reframe this and take a different perspective? And what could that shift mean for you?
Wonderful questions to sit with.
About the Author
Theresa is a Clinical Hypnotherapist and Strategic Psychotherapist based in Canberra, working with clients both in person and online through her practice, Navigating Calm. She helps people create lasting positive change by breaking free from unhelpful patterns and reconnecting with calm, clarity, and confidence.
If you’re ready to take the next step towards lasting change in your life, get in touch today to book an appointment.

Small Shifts, Big Change: Moving Towards a Calmer State of Mind
Part of creating change in your life begins with awareness — noticing what’s happening in your thoughts, feelings, and body, and then deciding whether that reaction is valid and useful. Sometimes our initial thoughts or responses don’t serve us very well. When that’s the case, the next step is to consider what would be more helpful instead.
Ask yourself: What state do I want to be in? What step do I want to be taking? What thought would I rather be having right now? Once you’ve identified where you’d like to be, the focus becomes how to gently move yourself in that direction.
There are many ways to shift your state, but one simple and effective approach is a self check-in. Take a moment to notice what’s happening for you physically and mentally. Then, start making small, deliberate adjustments that move you closer to how you’d like to feel.
For example, if you’re feeling stressed or overwhelmed and want to move toward a sense of calm neutrality, start with your body. Notice your shoulders — are they tense or lifted? Try wriggling them and letting them drop. Notice your breathing — is it shallow? Take a few slow, deep breaths. Maybe your posture is slumped; sit up a little taller. Picture what “neutral calm” might look and feel like for you, and allow your body to settle into that position. Each of these small shifts is a step away from tension and a step towards balance.
Another helpful strategy is to write your thoughts down. You might note what you don’t like about your current state and what draws you toward the state you’d prefer. I remember once writing that I felt like a failure but wanted to feel empowered — and simply writing those words helped me create some distance from the feeling. It gave me the space to reflect and realise that I hadn’t failed at all — I was just stuck in an unhelpful frame of mind.
You might choose to do a full body scan, noticing how each part of you feels, or just a quick all-over check-in. However you approach it, the goal is the same: small changes that lead to a big difference. These simple acts help you shift gently towards the path you want to be on — the one that leads you forward.
About the Author
Theresa is a Clinical Hypnotherapist and Strategic Psychotherapist based in Canberra, working with clients both in person and online through her practice, Navigating Calm. She helps people create lasting positive change by breaking free from unhelpful patterns and reconnecting with calm, clarity, and confidence.
If you’re ready to take the next step towards lasting change in your life, get in touch today to book an appointment.
How to Ease Stress and Anxiety by Noticing Life’s Little Delights

In our constant search for happiness – something social media often tells us we should be chasing – it’s easy to forget that a good life is made up of a full range of emotions. Happiness is beautiful, but it feels even richer when it follows sadness. Calm is nourishing, but we often appreciate it most after stress. Real life is a mix of highs, lows, in-betweens, and many pleasantly ordinary moments in between.
When you’re feeling overwhelmed, stressed, or worn down, that search for happiness can feel completely out of reach. Our minds tend to filter what we notice: when we tell ourselves we’re stressed, we find endless signs to confirm it. So how do we begin to turn this around?
One simple step is to start looking for microdoses of delight, wonder, or awe. It might be pausing to watch a bee collect nectar, noticing a dog stretching into the patch of sun on the carpet, or spotting the first buds appearing in the garden. Small, fleeting things — yet powerful reminders that joy is still threaded through the day.
If you set yourself a gentle goal to notice just one or two of these moments each day, you begin to balance out the negative messages of stress and overwhelm. You train your brain to see beyond the weight of what feels hard. Recording them – with a quick note, a photo, or even a mental bookmark – can give you a pause, a recharge, a moment of breathing space.
This doesn’t take away life’s difficulties, but it does loosen the grip of those heavy emotions. It reminds you that you’re not always stressed, and helps break the cycle of feeling stuck in those unhelpful patterns.
So, how will you look for your microdoses of delight today?
About the Author
Theresa is a Clinical Hypnotherapist and Strategic Psychotherapist based in Canberra, working with clients both in person and online through her practice, Navigating Calm. She helps people create lasting positive change by breaking free from unhelpful patterns and reconnecting with calm, clarity, and confidence. If you’re ready to take the next step towards lasting change in your life, get in touch today to book an appointment.

Lift Your Gaze: A Simple Strategy to Calm Anxiety and Interrupt Overwhelm
When anxiety strikes, it often feels like it takes over everything—your mind, your body, even your breath. It can be like falling into a well-rehearsed script that your body and brain know all too well. But what if you could interrupt that script with a simple, physical shift?
One surprisingly powerful way to do just that is this: lift your gaze above the horizon.
Yes, something as small as where you direct your eyes can help change how you feel in the moment. This simple movement is more than a mindfulness trick. It’s grounded in principles from Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP), a therapeutic approach that explores how our thoughts, behaviours, and body language all interconnect.
Let me explain why it works—and how you can use it.
How Anxiety Becomes a Pattern
When we feel anxious or overwhelmed, it’s often because our mind has recognised a familiar trigger and set off a series of automatic responses. These might include shallow breathing, racing thoughts, tension in the chest or shoulders, and a visual focus that drops downward—towards the ground, our feet, or a blank stare inward.
Over time, this becomes a well-trodden neural pathway. Your brain learns that when X happens, we react with Y. You don’t have to think about it anymore—your system just goes there.
But here’s the empowering part: we can interrupt that pattern.
The Power of Physiology
NLP recognises that how we use our body shapes how we feel. The link between physiology and emotion isn’t one-way. It’s a feedback loop. That means if you change your posture, your breath, or even where your eyes are looking, you can send a different signal back to your brain—and that signal can help break the anxiety cycle.
Lifting your gaze is one of those “pattern interrupts.”
Think about the last time you were deep in anxious thought. Chances are your vision narrowed or dropped. Now imagine doing the opposite:
- Raise your eyes.
- Look up and out—ideally above the horizon.
- Take in a broader view of your surroundings.
This action cues your nervous system that you’re safe, aware, and not under immediate threat. It’s not just symbolic—it changes the actual feedback your brain receives.
What Happens When You Look Up?
In NLP, looking upwards is often associated with visual processing, which typically engages the part of the brain used for imagination and creativity. In contrast, looking down tends to lead us inward, often into the emotional (kinaesthetic) or critical (internal dialogue) states that feed overwhelm.
By changing your eye direction, you disrupt the emotional momentum. You step out of the trance of anxiety and into a more neutral—or even resourceful—state.
A Simple Practice to Try
You can use this technique anytime, anywhere. Here’s how:
- Pause – When you notice anxiety creeping in, or your thoughts racing, stop for a moment.
- Breathe – Take a slow breath in through your nose, and exhale fully.
- Lift Your Gaze – Gently raise your eyes above the horizon. Look at a tree, the sky, a point on the wall—something neutral or calming.
- Stay Present – Allow yourself to really see your surroundings. Let your awareness widen. Notice details without judgement.
- Notice the Shift – You may feel an immediate difference. The thoughts might slow. Your chest may feel less tight. There’s space again.
Why This Matters
Clients I work with often describe anxiety as something that “just happens” to them. But part of our work together is about recognising that we can shift our experience. Not by force or suppression, but by using tools like this one to interrupt old patterns.
Lifting your gaze is one small move in a bigger toolbox. It’s not about pretending everything is fine. It’s about giving your brain and body a new message—one that creates a circuit breaker for the spiral.
Ready to Change the Way You Relate to Anxiety?
This is just one of the many tools I share with clients who are learning to respond differently to anxiety and overwhelm. Hypnotherapy and strategic psychotherapy can help you not only manage symptoms, but unlearn the patterns that keep you stuck—so you can create new ones that support calm, confidence, and clarity.
If you’d like support interrupting your own anxious patterns and finding a better way forward, I offer a free 20-minute consultation. You can book online here.

How to Use Box Breathing to Calm Your Mind
How many times when you are feeling stressed do you hear someone say ‘just breathe’? If you are like me your automatic response might be ‘I AM breathing!!!’ However, different patterns of breathing can impact you in ways that aren’t always obvious at first! Box Breathing is a tool you can use anytime, anywhere, to lower your stress, connect with your calm, and break the patterns of overwhelm. It is portable, convenient and practical!
Why does breathing help us to calm our body and mind?
When we are stressed we tend to tense up, take shallow breaths, lift our shoulders, tense our muscles slightly, and start the unhelpful thought patterns that disconnect our logical brain from our emotional brain. This can activate the part of our brain that creates a fight or flight response. By slowing our breathing, focusing on deeper breaths, and counting at the same time, we can shift from that automatic pattern of tension and stress and connect with our parasympathetic nervous system. This means that we may reconnect with our logic, and give ourselves time to think of different strategies to help manage the situation. The very fact that we are counting creates a mini-meditation and a break from the whirling thoughts in our mind.
How does Box Breathing work?
Box Breathing is called that because a box shape has 4 sides. (This technique is also known as square breathing, 4-4-4 breathing and other names for that reason!)
The process is that you:
1. Slowly breathe out over 4 seconds
2. Wait for 4 seconds
3. Slowly take a deep breath over 4 seconds
4. Hold that breath for 4 seconds
5. Repeat the process 1 – 3 times

Additional tips
To build your practice of box breathing you might also do one, some or all of these steps:
- Look for a quiet space to sit uninterrupted
- Close your eyes
- Place a hand on your chest to feel the breath rise and fall
- Practice 5 minutes of box-breathing each morning before you start your day
Summary
Box breathing is a tool that can be used to calm yourself down when experiencing moments of stress, anger, frustration or anxiety. It is also a technique that you can practice to enhance moments of calm, building your ability to use it for the times when you might need it. And if you prefer to learn by watching – here is a video of me explaining the technique! Youtube
Blink VuMu – Creating Healthier Patterns
I wrote about the technique of interrupting overthinking using ‘Blink VuMu’ a while ago, and many of you have found it helpful. Since then I have realised that there are many more uses to this technique than just ‘overthinking’. This article explains the broader applications of this technique and some ways of incorporating it so that you create healthier patterns in your life.
The concept of Blink VuMu is that you blink to create a pattern interrupter in any of the automatic patterns you are running. This might be anxiety, it could be a strong feeling that overrides your logic, or it could be your critical inner voice telling you unhelpful things. Once you have interrupted the pattern, then you can ask yourself the important curious questions of whether the pattern you are running is valid, and if the answer is yes, whether it is useful.
The next step is to then ask yourself what is more useful, or the most useful pattern you could adopt instead. Another question that can be helpful to ask yourself is ‘What would this look like if I had already solved the problem?’
By asking yourself these questions you create new pathways and approaches that are more helpful, and are more connected to the reality of the world, rather than the stories we can create in our imagination and react to.
In a step by step format it looks like this:
Step 1) Blink wildly for 5 seconds (count back from 5-1)
Step 2) Get curious – How am I doing this?
Step 3) Ask yourself the following questions
Q1) Is this Valid? YES/NO
Q2) Is this Useful? YES/NO
Q3) If not, what would be a More Useful, or the Most Useful response I could offer right now? Or, if I had solved this problem, what would it look like?
The more you practice this approach, the easier it is to interrupt your thinking, check the validity of your feelings, and stop the inner critical voice from running the unhelpful patterns.
If you would like to explore this further, you may find this video explanation useful – Blink VuMu – a technique to create healthier patterns.
You may also like to book an appointment with me to learn how to apply this to your life and create a new path forwards.

Harnessing Hypnotherapy to Reduce Stress
In our fast-paced world, stress seems almost unavoidable. Juggling responsibilities, work demands, and personal commitments often leaves little time for us to breathe and reset. While some stress can be motivating, excessive stress takes a toll on both mind and body, leading to burnout, anxiety, and even chronic health issues. If you’re feeling overwhelmed, you might find relief in a surprising yet highly effective tool: hypnotherapy.
Hypnotherapy is a therapeutic approach that works on a deep, subconscious level to help clients relax, reframe their stressors, and develop healthy coping mechanisms. In this post, let’s explore how hypnotherapy can help you relieve stress and regain control.
Understanding Stress and Its Impact
Stress is your body’s response to perceived threats or demands. When you’re stressed, your brain signals a fight-or-flight response, leading to the release of hormones like adrenaline and cortisol. While helpful in short bursts, ongoing stress keeps your body in a state of heightened alert, causing physical symptoms such as muscle tension, headaches, digestive issues, and sleep disturbances. Mentally, stress can lead to feelings of overwhelm, anxiety, and eventually burnout.
Traditional stress management techniques—like exercise, meditation, and mindfulness—can help, but they often only scratch the surface. Hypnotherapy, on the other hand, works on a subconscious level, where deep-seated beliefs and automatic responses to stress are stored. By addressing these underlying factors, hypnotherapy offers a more holistic, lasting solution.
How Hypnotherapy Eases Stress
1. Deep Relaxation
During hypnotherapy, you’re guided into a deeply relaxed state, which itself can help reduce stress. This state, known as a trance, allows your body to release physical tension and feel at ease. In this calm state, your brain produces alpha and theta brainwaves, which are linked to relaxation, creativity, and even healing. This physical and mental relaxation is not just temporary; with repeated sessions, it helps “rewire” your brain’s stress response to react with calm instead of panic.
2. Rewiring Automatic Responses
Many people have automatic stress responses—they get anxious before a big presentation, feel tense in social settings, or worry incessantly about small tasks. These responses are usually based on subconscious beliefs and patterns that have been programmed over time. In a hypnotherapy session, we can uncover these triggers and reframe them, helping you respond more calmly. Through powerful visualisation and suggestion techniques, hypnotherapy can teach your subconscious mind to adopt healthier responses, reducing your stress reactions over time.
3. Building Resilience
Hypnotherapy doesn’t just address the symptoms of stress; it also helps you develop resilience. Resilience is the ability to handle life’s challenges without becoming overwhelmed. Using tools like guided visualisation, Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP), and positive reinforcement, hypnotherapy helps build mental and emotional resilience, giving you the strength to handle stressors without being derailed by them.
4. Managing Physical Symptoms
When stress manifests physically—as headaches, muscle tightness, or sleep disturbances—hypnotherapy can be a powerful tool to address these symptoms. Through body scanning and relaxation techniques, hypnotherapy helps reduce physical tension, relieve pain, and improve sleep quality. By reprogramming your subconscious response to stress, hypnotherapy can also help alleviate chronic symptoms that have been resistant to other treatments.
5. Creating Lasting Lifestyle Changes
During hypnotherapy, we can work together to identify any lifestyle habits that contribute to your stress, such as procrastination, lack of boundaries, or unhealthy coping mechanisms. Hypnotherapy can help shift these habits, replacing them with healthier choices and patterns that support a balanced life. This empowers you to make meaningful changes in your daily routine, reducing stress long-term.
What to Expect from a Hypnotherapy Session for Stress
In a hypnotherapy session, you’ll start by discussing the sources of your stress and identifying specific goals. Then, we guide you into a relaxed, focused state where we can access your subconscious mind to explore and reframe the automatic responses contributing to your stress. Each session builds upon the last, helping you gradually shift your perspective and responses, with effects that extend well beyond the session itself.
With time, many clients report feeling calmer and more in control, not just in obvious moments of stress but in everyday life.
Finding Calm in the Chaos
If stress is holding you back from living fully, hypnotherapy could be the solution to help you regain control, find calm, and handle life’s challenges with ease. It’s a natural, non-invasive way to rewire your responses, build resilience, and finally feel at ease.
For anyone looking to take a meaningful step towards less stress, I invite you to book a free 20-minute consultation. Together, we can explore how hypnotherapy might be a fit for you and start a journey towards a more balanced, fulfilling life. You deserve to feel calm and centred—let’s navigate that path together.
Feel free to reach out, or find more tips on managing stress on my Instagram and Facebook pages.