About Kate

For a long time, I thought I had my life figured out.

My entire life, I wanted to be a dancer. I followed the plan all the way through—training, pursuing opportunities, and eventually moving to New York City to become a professional dancer.

On paper, I was living the dream I had always wanted.

But in the midst of achieving it, I realized something I didn’t expect: I was remarkably unhappy.

Not confused about the path.
Not uncertain about the effort.
But deeply disconnected from the version of life I had worked so hard to create.

And even harder to admit—I was no longer in love with the dream I had built my identity around.

What followed was a long period of unraveling and rebuilding.

I tried to “figure it out” the way I had been taught to—through effort, discipline, and trying to think my way into clarity.

I read all the books. I looked for the framework that would tell me what I “should” be doing next. I tried to make meaning out of the uncertainty by finding the right answer.

I became a yoga teacher. I explored work in environmental spaces. I built structure through routines, lists, morning practices—anything that might help me regain a sense of direction.

But underneath all of it, I kept running into the same truth:

Nothing would consume me in the same way dance had.

And eventually, I had to accept that maybe it wasn’t supposed to.

That realization shifted everything.

Because the problem wasn’t that I hadn’t found the “next thing.”

It was that I was still trying to replace one consuming identity with another, instead of learning how to actually be with myself in a new way.

What I was really learning—though I didn’t have the language for it yet—was how to rebuild self-trust.

How to stop outsourcing clarity.
How to stop forcing certainty.
And how to start listening inward again.

Eventually, that path led me to life coaching.

Not as a sudden decision, but as something that felt deeply aligned with the kind of work I had already been doing internally for years.

Over time, I began working with women who were in similar transitions—high-functioning, self-aware, and capable, but feeling internally disconnected from themselves and unsure what comes next.

Women who had done everything “right,” but no longer recognized themselves in the life they had built.

Over the past 11 years, this work has evolved into what I now call the Clarity in Action Method (CAM).

CAM is a structured process of emotional integration and self-reconnection designed to help you rebuild trust in yourself, clarify what is actually true for you, and move forward from a place of internal alignment rather than pressure or overthinking.

It combines deep inner work with grounded, intentional action—because insight alone isn’t enough, and action without alignment only reinforces disconnection.

In addition to my work with individual clients, I've facilitated leadership teams through organizational change, supported executive alignment during company mergers, and delivered keynote presentations designed to strengthen communication, clarity, and collaboration.

Whether I'm working with a CEO, a leadership team, or an individual client, the work often comes back to the same thing: helping people navigate change with greater self-awareness, clarity, and intention.

At its core, this work is not about becoming someone new.

It is about learning how to return to yourself after years of moving away from your own internal knowing.

To your clarity.
To your voice.
To the version of you that was never actually lost—just buried under expectation, identity, and survival patterns.

I believe most of us don’t need more information.

We need deeper access to ourselves.

My role is to help you see what is already there, trust it more fully, and translate it into a life that actually feels like yours.







A woman in athletic clothing smiling and enjoying a hike in a rural landscape with rolling hills, vineyards, and a partly cloudy sky during sunset.

When I’m not working, I’m usually reading, running, or having slow mornings that give me space to think, reflect, and reset. I value depth, honesty, and a life that feels grounded and intentional rather than rushed.