A woman with long dark hair wearing a light blue shirt, smiling against a plain background.

From an early age, I was fascinated by the big questions of human existence: What does life truly have to offer at its deepest level, and what path leads there? What lies beyond the boundaries of our constructed everyday reality? How does our mind work? How does a human being organize themselves—biologically, culturally, socially? What is the “I,” and how does it even come into being?

These questions not only accompanied me through my childhood and youth but also later on during my studies and my doctoral research. During this time, I engaged intensively with neuroscience, complex systems, cybernetics, systems theory, and the cultural construction of the self.

The core of my work today is NARM as a form of therapy—but fundamentally, it is about something much deeper: the radical permission that nothing needs to be different from what it is. Healing does not happen through effort, nor by erasing our wounds, but through a deep acceptance of what is now.

Sunset over the sea with rocks in the foreground, illuminated by rays of light.

My sessions are not about achieving something new or getting rid of something old. They are about our deepest being, about vulnerability, about opening up. About recognizing that—beyond all stories, all traumas, all limitations—we are always free in our very essence.

When we stop fighting against life, when we surrender completely to the moment, transformation happens on its own. What truly nourishes us is never outside of us.

Today, all of this flows into my work: modern science, therapeutic practice, and spiritual essence.

In addition to my PhD in Cultural Anthropology, my training as an integrative psychotherapy practitioner, and my certification as a NARM Master Practitioner, my work is deeply influenced by the teachings of the Indian sage Ramana Maharshi. His radical self-inquiry—the question “Who am I?”—forms, alongside NARM, the deepest foundation of my work.

It is not about doing something, but rather about letting go more and more of what we are not—in order to encounter ourselves, in depth, in silence, in simple being.

I look forward to meeting you in this space.

- Ramana Maharshi

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