Resources
These are the teachers, books, and ideas that have shaped my coaching approach to emotional healing, stressful thoughts, self-worth, habit change, and returning to the part of you that was never broken.
Explore the ResourcesHow I Use These Teachings
I do not believe healing comes from one single book, teacher, or method. I believe transformation happens when we slow down, question painful thoughts, understand our patterns, and return to love, awareness, and truth. These resources are part of the foundation behind the coaching work I offer.
Category One
For the beliefs that create suffering, shame, resentment, and the feeling that you are not good enough.
Byron Katie’s work is one of the clearest paths I have found for questioning stressful thoughts. Her four questions help people slow down and examine beliefs like “I’m not good enough,” “I’m not safe,” or “They should have treated me differently.”
Regina Dawn Akers’ teachings on discernment, contemplation, journaling, and listening inward have shaped the way I think about spiritual practice as something we live moment by moment.
Michael Singer’s work has deeply influenced my understanding of surrender, emotional freedom, and learning how to stop fighting the inner experience. His teachings help people practice letting life move through them without closing.
Category Two
For forgiveness, miracles, living from love, and remembering that healing is not just mental — it is spiritual too.
A Course in Miracles has shaped the way I understand forgiveness, fear, guilt, love, and healing perception. It teaches that miracles are expressions of love and that healing often begins by seeing differently.
Neale Donald Walsch’s work has influenced my belief that we are here to bring more love, light, and goodness into the world. His teachings connect healing with purpose and living as a source of love.
A Course of Love supports the movement from the mind into the heart. It has influenced the way I think about returning to the Self, listening to love, and allowing healing to happen through the heart.
Category Three
For becoming someone new from the inside, moving from fear to love, and choosing who you are being.
Peter Sage’s work has influenced the way I think about identity, emotional courage, and Be-Do-Have. His teachings remind us that transformation is not only about what we do — it is about who we are being while we do it.
Tom Campbell’s work has helped me think about healing as a movement from fear toward love. His ideas about consciousness, lowering entropy, and becoming love connect deeply with emotional healing work.
Neville Goddard’s teachings have shaped the way I think about identity, assumption, and living from the state of the person you are becoming. His work points toward inner change before outer change.
Category Four
For the patterns that keep repeating — cravings, emotional eating, anxiety, avoidance, and the habits we use to cope.
Dr. Judson Brewer’s work is central to my approach to cravings, emotional eating, anxiety, and habit change. He teaches that awareness, curiosity, and understanding habit loops can help the brain update old patterns without shame or force.
HeartMath has influenced the way I think about coherence, emotional regulation, and calming the body while still meeting life with courage. It offers practical tools for returning to a steadier inner state.
Mind Magic supports the idea that the mind can be trained through focused inner practice. It connects with identity work, mental rehearsal, self-image, and learning how to embody a new way of being.
Category Five
For choosing love, becoming stronger through pain, and building a life of meaning, courage, and practice.
Dr. Edith Eger’s life and work are a powerful reminder that even after deep pain, we can choose how we relate to ourselves and our future. Her teachings connect trauma healing with choice, compassion, and inner freedom.
Jordan Peterson’s work has influenced my thinking around responsibility, meaning, truth, and future authoring. His teachings help people look at who they are becoming and how to move forward with purpose.
Brian Johnson’s work brings together ancient wisdom, modern psychology, virtue, and daily practice. His teachings support the idea that transformation is built through small, consistent actions.
Where to Begin
You do not need to study everything at once. Choose the resource that matches the pain, question, or pattern you are working with right now.
Books and teachings can open the door, but sometimes the real shift happens when someone sits with you, listens deeply, and helps you see the painful thought you have been carrying. If you are ready to work through emotional pain, self-worth, old stories, or the habits you use to cope, I would be honored to support you.
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