Find Your Inner Peace

Specializing in Narcissistic Abuse, Parental Alienation, & Trauma Recovery

Glass marble on sandy beach during sunset with ocean and cloudy sky in background.

Start Your Healing Journey

  • Are you struggling with ongoing emotional pain caused by a relationship with a narcissistic abuser?

  • Are you experiencing the deep heartache and confusion that comes from parental alienation?

  • Are past traumas continuing to impact your thoughts, feelings, and daily life in a significant way?

If your answer is yes to any of these questions, then this is a safe and supportive place to begin your journey toward healing. We are here to guide and support you in reclaiming your true self, establishing healthy boundaries, and finding your voice after enduring these challenging and painful experiences.

Narcissistic Abuse = Domestic Violence

Narcissistic Abuse is a pattern of emotional and psychological mistreatment designed to control, demean, and exploit another.

One in three women & one in four men experience some form of intimate partner violence.

Icon of three women and four men, some in light blue, some in white, representing a group of people.

Parental Alienation = Child Abuse

Parental alienation occurs when one parent manipulates a child to unjustifiably reject or fear the other parent, often during high-conflict divorce or separation.

Over 22 million adults (one in fifteen) are victims of parental alienation in the United States.

Arrangement of human icons with 4 women at the top and 4 men at the bottom.

Narcissistic Families = Domestic Violence + Child Abuse

Narcissistic families are systems where a parent’s narcissistic traits create dysfunction through manipulation, control, lack of empathy, and a focus on maintaining a perfect image over genuine emotional well-being and individual identity.

We cannot change the cards we are dealt, just how we play the hand
— Randy Pausch
A person's hand makes an OK sign with the thumb and index finger forming a circle, holding the sun between them in a bright, partly cloudy sky.
Relationships with narcissists are held in place by the hope of a ‘someday better,’ with little evidence to support it will ever arrive.
— Dr. Ramani Durvasula