Coaching is a natural extension of my teaching and mentoring. I work with creative and professional adults — many of them neurodivergent — on the practical side of doing meaningful work: staying focused, following through, and building systems that fit how their minds actually work.
Who I Work With
I coach students, artists, filmmakers, and working professionals who have plenty of ideas and ambition but struggle with the follow-through — getting started, staying organized, and carrying projects all the way to done. Many of the people I work with have ADHD or identify as neurodivergent; others simply want a steadier, more sustainable way to work.
What Coaching Looks Like
Coaching is a regular, collaborative conversation. We look at what you’re trying to accomplish, what tends to get in the way, and what actually helps — then we build small, durable systems around that. You set the direction; I help you stay honest, focused, and moving. [TODO: add session format, frequency, length, fees, and whether sessions are in person, online, or both.]
Areas of Support
- Executive functioning and organization
- Follow-through and accountability
- Motivation and momentum
- Focus and attention management
- Creativity and moving through creative blocks
- Sustainable routines and systems
My Approach
My approach is collaborative and strengths-based. I start from how you already work best and build from there, rather than asking you to become someone you’re not. The goal is steady, real progress on the work that matters to you.
Coaching is not therapy, counseling, or medical treatment, and it is not a substitute for care from a licensed professional. It’s a practical, forward-looking partnership focused on your goals and follow-through.
If this sounds like the kind of support you’re looking for, get in touch.