Trauma-informed, decolonial and culturally responsive restorative practice
grounded in Indigenous wisdom, relational care, and lived experience.

A living rhythm of knowing, doing, and reflecting, woven through the sacred cycles of life. It is not governed by deadlines, but guided by connection and continuity.
If you’re passionate about making your services, organisation, or work culture more trauma-informed and culturally responsive, infused with alternative ways of knowing and doing, I’d love to connect.
I offer:
Decolonial and culturally responsive restorative practice training
Capacity building for leaders
Co-design and consultations
Reflective session for team building
Facilitation for restorative process: group, family relationship, couple and community processes
Fit for purpose healing circles
Workplace restorative process
Many systems focus on performance, compliance, and outcomes.
Few make space for healing, reflection, and human connection.
Unaddressed harm shows up as conflict, burnout, disengagement, and fractured relationships.
When relationships break down, everything else follows. When relationships are restored, everything changes.
Restorative practice offers a different path, one grounded in accountability, dignity, and care.
My work draws from Indigenous perspectives that honour community, reciprocity, and collective responsibility.
Inspired by Sumi Naga values of kinship, courage, and shared humanity, I bring a holistic and deeply relational approach to every space I enter.
This is not a one-size-fits-all model. It is work shaped by people, place, and story.
I bring academic knowledge, frontline practice, and lived experience to support meaningful and lasting change.
Restorative Living invites a return to what matters most:
connection, dignity, and shared humanity
Healing happens in relationships.
Change begins with conversation.
We respectfully acknowledge the Traditional Owners and Custodians of the lands on which we live and work.
We honour their enduring connection to Country and recognise that these lands always were, and always will be, Aboriginal land.
Sovereignty was never ceded.
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