I offer bespoke Coaching to individuals to help them resolve difficult financial situations. Over twenty years of doing this work, clients come with all manner of issues. Without exception, each has had insights that have helped them move forward.
Scroll down below for more information.
- Family dynamics
- Life changes
- Spirituality
- Creatives
- Trauma
If you’d like to work with me, please contact me to set up a no-obligation discovery call. I’ll give you a quote based on your needs and affordability.
- Family dynamics: Tensions and conflicts involving money are not uncommon, especially involving inheritance and divorce. Financial decisions involving family members can be very challenging. Emotional entanglement makes communication clumsy, precisely when it needs to be handled with sensitivity. Relationships can be destroyed over apparently trivial things leaving a legacy of stress and pain.
- Life changes: Some changes in life direction can be planned for, but some come out of the blue. It could be a bereavement, divorce, illness, redundancy. It could be positive changes too such as receiving an inheritance or starting a new business. Whichever it is, it can take some adjustment.
- Spirituality: Spiritual traditions have a lot to say about money and wealth – what’s acceptable and what’s not. Unfortunately, misinterpretations lead to a great deal of inner conflict for sincere people who want their financial lives to align with their spiritual values. I particularly love to work with this area. I’ve had to address it in my own life.
- Creatives: Creative and artistic people have long had a difficult relationship with money. The archetype of the artist who suffers for their art is unfortunately widely pervasive. I’ve worked with many creatives to help them understand the ways in which money (and making/having wealth) is and can be aligned with their values.
- Trauma: Financial trauma can leave lasting patterns of skewed perceptions and choices which never adjust to the current realities. Trauma caused by other factors too has a profound indirect impact on our financial outlook and decision making. This is why it can often be so difficult to change harmful habits, even though we really want to, and despite trying in perhaps a variety of ways.