My own path started on the soccer field, where I learned early what resilience really looks like. After breaking my leg freshman year, I refused to let adversity define me. I came back stronger, eventually becoming Gatorade Player of the Year in Maryland and continuing my career at the collegiate level. That experience shaped everything that came next: the discipline to push through setbacks, the humility to grow, and the clarity to pursue what truly matters.
I stayed connected to college athletics throughout my undergraduate and graduate studies, earning both my bachelor’s and master’s degrees in Sports Management. My career naturally evolved into serving high achievers — first as an academic advisor, then as the NCAA’s first-ever Diversity & Inclusion intern, and later at the University of Virginia, where I worked alongside national championship programs and world-class coaches. Those years taught me how elite performers think, lead, and thrive under pressure.
But achievement alone wasn’t the whole story.
When my family relocated, I shifted into the insurance industry and quickly found myself building — again — a program from the ground up within a large company. It was exciting, challenging, and successful… and yet, once the operation was up and running, I felt that familiar tug.
The question so many high performers eventually ask: Is this what I'm meant to be doing?
After working with my own coach, I knew that I was meant for more.
Across every chapter — retail as a teenager, stay‑at‑home mom and accountability coach during the pandemic, higher education, corporate leadership — one truth kept resurfacing: I am at my best when I’m helping people step into who they’re meant to be.
Today, as a Level 1 certified coach through Brown University and ACT, I help high performers realign their lives with their values, gifts, and purpose. My work is grounded in the belief that when you live in alignment, everything changes — your joy, your relationships, your impact. High performers already know how to succeed. I help them succeed in a way that feels true to who they are.
If you’re ready for more — not more pressure, but more meaning — you’re in the right place.
