About Me
When I was eight years old, I went to Girl Scout camp for the first time.
All the girls and counselors used their camp names. You could make one up or have one passed down.
My mom, who had been a Girl Scout herself, dubbed me Ladybug to keep her namesake going.
I shrugged and got out of the car as she dropped me off.
“Thanks, Momma,” I said.
I didn’t like it. But I didn’t have the heart to tell her.
I kissed her goodbye and walked into the mess hall for check-in.
There was an older girl there, a counselor, with beautiful freckly cheeks, long brown hair, and a sparkly, effervescent personality. Her name tag had the letters G-E-M-I-N-I etched in white.
I was intrigued.
“Jeh-meny. Huh. What kind of word… what does that even mean?” I wondered to myself.
Staring at the name tag, I started sounding it out.
“Geh-men-nee… juh-juh-em…”
“Hi, I’m Jim-in-eye, and I’m your counselor this week. What’s your name, cutie?”
“Oh! JIM-IN-EYE!” I said to myself. Also out loud, because I was eight.
“Hi, I’m uh, Lady…”
I paused.
I quickly tore my mother’s handwritten name tag off my badge-and-SWAPs-covered green hoodie.
“I’m Gemini… too. Yeah. I’m that too. Silly, I know. Another one.”
“Sorry, Mom,” I whispered.
The moment I heard it, I knew.
I wasn’t Ladybug.
I was Gemini.
I didn’t know what it meant or where it came from, but I knew that’s who I wanted to be.
Looking back, that was probably my first real moment with astrology.
When I figured out years later that I was, in fact, a Gemini, eight-year-old me felt both pleased and slightly vindicated for calling it early.
Astrology has always given me a language for things I’ve felt but didn’t know how to name.
Over time, it stopped being something I studied and became something I lived.
I’ve continued to study, train, and deepen my understanding over the years, both formally and through my own research.
I started to see how patterns repeat, how timing matters, and how certain parts of us show up again and again until new meaning is found and we begin to understand them differently. That’s the lens I bring into my work now.
My approach is grounded, conversational, and rooted in real life.
In our time together, I’m here to sit with you, talk through what’s actually going on, and help you see yourself more clearly.
A lot of the people who find me are in a moment of transition. They’re figuring out who they are, what they want, or how to trust themselves again.
Sometimes they come in with something specific.
Sometimes they just know they need clarity.
Either way, we start there.
Outside of sessions, I’m a storyteller and improviser. Those foundations shape how I read charts. I’m always listening for the throughline, the meaning underneath the details, and the part of your story that’s still unfolding, in a yes, and way.
I wrote a piece that was published in Human Parts that reflects how I think and make meaning of experience. You can read it here → Life’s Impermanence.
You don’t need to have everything figured out before you come to a session.
You just need to be where you are.
If you’d like to sit down and talk through your current chapter of life and get a clearer sense of where you’re headed, come spend some time with me.