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Who I am

I’m glad you’re here.
Not because you are looking for answers — but because something in you may be asking for space.

I am a mother to a six-year-old girl.
Motherhood did not simplify my life — it deepened it. It slowed me down in ways I didn’t expect, and gently turned my attention inward. Through my daughter, I have learned that sensitivity is not something to fix or overcome, but something to honour. I have learned that children don’t need perfect parents — they need present ones.

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I am a teacher and educator by background, and I have worked with children, teenagers, and adults in both mainstream and SEN settings, across different educational systems in Hungary and in the UK. .

Yet what has always mattered most to me was never the system itself, but the human being within it — the child, the parent, the adult trying to do their best under pressure.

Alongside teaching, I became a coach not because I wanted to fix parents, but because I saw how many mothers feel quietly overwhelmed, disconnected, or unsure of themselves in the midst of caring deeply.

 

Mothers who read, reflect, and want to do right by their children — yet slowly begin to doubt their instincts in a world full of advice, expectations, and noise.

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I don’t believe that growth happens through pressure.
I don’t believe in quick fixes or perfect parenting formulas.
I don’t believe that you need to become someone else to be a “good enough” parent.

 

My work is about slowing things down. Creating space. Helping mothers reconnect with themselves — their inner voice, their emotional truth, their own sense of timing — so they can relate to their children from a place of presence rather than self-doubt.

 

Often this reconnection begins quietly.
When you realise you are no longer sure whose voice you are listening to.
When well-meaning advice has become louder than your own inner knowing.
When something inside you asks for attention, not correction.

 

I work gently, intuitively, and with deep respect for each mother’s inner rhythm. I don’t offer parenting strategies or step-by-step solutions. I walk alongside you as you begin to trust yourself again — often slowly, often quietly — but always honestly.

 

I live in the UK with my family. Our life is imperfect and often demanding, but deeply real. There are tired days and unanswered questions, but also moments of closeness that matter. Being a mother reminds me daily that presence is more important than productivity, and that real learning — for children and adults alike — grows through relationship, not performance.

 

If you are here because motherhood feels deeper than you expected, because you are sensitive in a loud world, or because you want to parent without losing yourself — you are not alone.

 

This work is not about changing who you are.
It is about coming back to yourself — gently, honestly, and in your own time — and parenting from that place.

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