About New Thought Coaching
I work with thoughtful, spiritually literate people who find themselves in transition—often not in crisis, but at a point where familiar ways of understanding no longer fully hold. My approach is grounded in consciousness-first inquiry, informed by metaphysical insight and contemporary understanding of human development, and oriented toward clarity that allows movement to emerge naturally rather than being forced.
Driven by passion
I don’t come to this work as someone who has “figured it out.”
I come as someone who has stayed with the questions long enough to be changed by them.
Much of my life has been shaped by sincere faith, disciplined study, professional responsibility, and seasons of real transition. Over time, I began to notice something important: the moments that mattered most were not resolved by effort, certainty, or better strategies. They shifted when understanding caught up with experience—when something quietly reorganized from the inside.
That observation became central to how I work.
My background includes formal theological and metaphysical education alongside long-term applied practice. I hold a master’s degree from Liberty University, where my studies were grounded in Christian theology, worldview development, and disciplined inquiry. I also hold a PhD in Metaphysical Counseling, with focused study in consciousness, spiritual development, and the inner dynamics of meaning-making and change.
In addition to my academic work, I am the author of multiple books exploring the intersection of faith, metaphysics, and lived experience—particularly for those navigating spiritual transition, re-orientation, and growth beyond inherited frameworks. My writing and teaching reflect years of sustained engagement with spiritual philosophy, psychology, and contemporary consciousness studies.
Alongside this, I have spent decades working in practical, real-world contexts that require clarity, responsibility, and follow-through. This work is not theoretical for me. It has been tested in lived experience—my own and that of the people I’ve worked with over many years.
I am especially drawn to people who are thoughtful, spiritually literate, and inwardly honest—people who may still value faith, meaning, and depth, yet sense that familiar structures no longer fully hold. Often, these are not people in crisis. They are people in development.
My work is informed by historic spiritual and metaphysical insight, as well as contemporary understanding from psychology and consciousness studies. No single framework is treated as final. What matters most is accuracy—how experience is actually being lived, interpreted, and understood.
I do not see people as broken or in need of fixing.
I see growth as a natural process that can become strained when understanding lags behind experience.
In our work together, I don’t offer answers to adopt or beliefs to replace. I guide a disciplined process of reflection and re-orientation—one that helps assumptions surface, perception clarify, and movement emerge without pressure or force. The authority here does not come from me. It comes from clearer seeing.
I am not a therapist, a guru, or a motivational coach. I don’t bypass difficulty with positivity, nor do I dramatize struggle in the name of depth. Confusion, doubt, and tension are treated as meaningful signals, not obstacles. Responsibility is central, but blame is not. Discernment matters—both in naming what is present and in respecting the limits of the work.
What I offer is simple, but not superficial: a structured, consciousness-first approach to clarity for people who are ready to engage honestly with their experience.
This work tends to resonate with metaphysical seekers, people of faith in transition, and those who sense that the next step forward will not come from trying harder—but from seeing more clearly.
If that language feels familiar, we may be aligned.
The next step is not a commitment.
It’s a conversation.
A Note for People of Faith
If you come to this work from a place of faith, you are welcome here.
Many of the people I work with still value their spiritual tradition deeply. Others feel caught between reverence and questioning—unable to simply return to what once worked, yet unwilling to discard what still feels true. Often, both devotion and doubt are present at the same time.
This work does not ask you to abandon your faith, reinterpret it prematurely, or replace it with another system. Nor does it require certainty, agreement, or resolution.
What it does offer is space.
A space where questions are not treated as failures.
Where doubt is not pathologized.
Where tension is not rushed toward answers.
Faith, like consciousness, develops. At certain points, familiar language, beliefs, or structures may no longer fully account for lived experience. That does not mean something has gone wrong. It often means something deeper is forming.
In this work, spiritual language is used carefully and honestly—not to override experience, but to illuminate it. The goal is not to preserve belief at all costs, nor to dismantle it unnecessarily, but to allow understanding to mature in a way that remains grounded, responsible, and real.
If you find yourself wanting to stay faithful without becoming rigid, to question without becoming cynical, or to deepen your spiritual life without bypassing your humanity, this work may be a good fit.
There is no requirement to arrive anywhere in particular.
Only a willingness to be honest about where you are.
Where This Work Is Helpful
Transition coaching offers structured support during periods of personal, spiritual, or identity realignment—especially when familiar frameworks no longer fit, but meaning and integrity still matter.
The focus is on clarity, internal coherence, and responsible next steps, without pressure to adopt new beliefs, abandon old ones prematurely, or force outcomes before they’re ready.
One-on-one coaching provides a calm, structured space for reflection, decision clarity, and thoughtful exploration of what is actually happening beneath the surface.
Sessions are practical and grounded, supporting forward movement that aligns with your values, intelligence, and lived reality—without performance, urgency, or external agendas.
Small group work offers guided, reflective dialogue with a small number of others who are navigating similar periods of change and realignment.
These groups meet online and are intentionally kept small to support shared inquiry, practical integration, and thoughtful conversation—without advice-giving, comparison, or pressure to perform.
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