Vibrations
Grief Guide | End of Life Doula | Sound Practitioner

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About me...
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For as long as I can remember, people have told me their stories. Strangers have opened up to me in grocery store lines, waiting rooms, and everyday places where most people are just making small talk.
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When I was younger, I noticed the same thing about my mom. Whenever we went somewhere, she would often find herself in a deep conversation with someone she had just met. As a child, I would get so impatient, always wondering why random people seemed to hold us up, but my mom just possessed that unique ability to make people feel seen, that their stories were important, and that they mattered.
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She naturally created space for people to be seen, heard, and acknowledged. Through observing her, she taught me to do the same.
​What led me here...
I became a Registered Nurse and spent over a decade working in emergency medicine, later transitioning to inpatient hospice care. Throughout my career, I have had the privilege of being with people during some of the most difficult moments of their lives. That work changed me. It taught me what truly matters and how to be with people in very real, very human moments.
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In late 2025, my life was profoundly changed when my mom was diagnosed with stage four cancer that had already spread throughout her body. Just 42 days later, she died. Losing her changed me in ways I never expected, but it also made my path very clear.
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Learning to live in the world without my mom showed me how isolating grief can be. During that time, I began to notice how many other people were also carrying heavy loss, quietly, without much space to talk about it.
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Vibrations was created because I don’t believe we are meant to carry grief alone. People need a space where they can talk about who or what they lost, say the names, tell the stories, and be exactly where they are without feeling rushed.
My work brings together my background as a nurse, grief coach, and end-of-life doula with supportive holistic practices like sound, breathwork, meditation, and restorative yoga.
These practices support the nervous system and the body, because grief and trauma are not just things we think about, they are experiences we carry physically and emotionally.
If you are here because you are grieving, supporting someone who is dying, or going through a heavy season in your life, I want you to know that you do not have to go through it alone.
