Early in my healthcare career, I worked under a manager whose leadership was built on fear. The stress was constant. Trust was nonexistent. The impact on our team and patient care was real.
That experience lit a fire in me. I wanted to answer one question: Can any manager learn to lead well?
I’ve spent the last 30 years proving the answer is yes.
What Psychiatric Nursing Taught Me About Leadership
As a Director of Nursing working with adolescents in behavioral healthcare where young people whose most challenging behaviors masked deep pain and trauma.
That work taught me something that changed the way I lead and the way I coach: what you see on the surface is rarely the whole story. I learned to respond instead of react. To ask “what happened to you?” instead of “what’s wrong with you?” To create safety before expecting change.
Those same principles work just as powerfully in boardrooms, hospitals, nonprofits, and every organization where people are leading other people through complexity and change.
After two decades of coaching leaders, I developed a framework that cuts through the complexity of people-centered leadership. Communication. Appreciation. Respect. Empathy. Four principles that reduce friction, build trust, and create conditions where people do their best work.
When I'm not coaching leaders or writing, you'll find me traveling with my husband, riding motorcycles, and spending time with family and friends. These experiences remind me daily that leadership is about showing up authentically and caring deeply about the people around you.

Your complimentary 30-minute Leadership Clarity Session is the first step. No pressure, no pitch. Just a conversation about where you are and where you want to go.