Why I Do This Work


I didn’t arrive at creative flow by accident — or through discipline alone.

I’ve spent my life inside creative systems: art studios, film sets, post-production houses, festival grounds, classrooms, and immersive installations. I’ve seen what supports creativity — and what quietly destroys it.


An example of my personal artwork

About Me:

I’ve worked as a solo artist and as part of large creative teams
as a director, producer, post-production artist, and immersive installation creator.

I’ve experienced the unique pressures of:

  • Making deeply personal work

  • Navigating deadlines, budgets, and hierarchies

  • Collaborating with large teams and high-profile talent

  • Holding creative vision inside complex systems

What I learned is this: creative block looks different at every scale, but it comes from the same root —
misalignment between nervous system, environment, and expectation.


My background spans both formal training and lived practice. I hold a BFA in Visual Media Production, am a trauma-informed yoga teacher, and a trained coach. I have spent years studying creativity through embodied, psychological, and systems-based lenses.

This means my work doesn’t treat procrastination, anxiety, or resistance as moral failures — but as signals. Signals that can be understood, worked with, and transformed.

Some examples of recent professional work

Why “Creative Alchemy”?

Alchemy, historically, was not just about turning lead into gold — it was about transformation through understanding.

In creative work, resistance is the lead. Anxiety, procrastination, self-doubt — these aren’t obstacles to creativity. They’re raw material.

My role is not to motivate or discipline you. It’s to help you learn how to transmute resistance into information — and information into flow.

If you’re a creative who feels called to make meaningful work — and tired of fighting yourself to do it — this work may be a good fit.