Single Session
Perfect for: quick clarity or getting unstuck. Best when the issue is specific (long bedtimes, early waking, nap resistance, routine confusion).
✓ 75-minute session
✓ Includes tailored resources where relevant
5 sessions
A series of coaching sessions for people navigating more complex or layered situations that benefit from continuity and reflection, such as transitions, relocation, or ongoing family dynamics.
✓ 75-minute session (the next ones are 60 minutes)
✓ Includes tailored resources where relevant
How it works
Step 1
Choose the level of support that fits your situation
Single sessions offer clarity around a specific issue. Ongoing support allows space for deeper work and follow-through over time.
Step 2
Schedule your consultation
After booking, you’ll receive a link by email to choose a date and time that suits you.
Step 3
Thoughtful, personalised guidance
Each consultation is shaped around your family, your questions, and your context. Depending on the package, parents also have access to brief follow-up communication for a limited period, to support integration and next steps.
What we can work on
Parents come to me when everyday parenting challenges feel layered or confusing, and quick advice doesn’t help.
We often work on:
- parenting across languages and cultures, including bilingual and expat family life
- setting clear, compassionate boundaries and reducing power struggles
- strong emotions, resistance, and intense behaviour
- screen use and digital boundaries in everyday family life
- sleep challenges such as frequent night wakings, difficulty falling asleep, sleep associations
- welcoming a sibling and sibling rivalry
- aligning parenting approaches between partners
- values-based family choices, including sustainability and plant-based living, and the social dynamics that come with them
Most parents don’t need more tips but they need help seeing what matters for their family. My work focuses on translating developmental science into practical decisions that fit your values, your culture, and your real-life constraints. Parents can begin with a webinar for clarity around a specific topic, or choose individual consultations for more personalised support.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Find answers to the most common questions about.
“Gentle parenting” is a term that’s often used today, but it is not a clearly defined or evidence-based framework. It functions more as a parenting trend than a coherent model, and it can mean very different things to different people.
My work is grounded in authoritative parenting, a well-established approach supported by decades of research in child development and psychology. Authoritative parenting is both warm and structured: it prioritizes emotional connection, responsiveness, and respect, while also recognizing the importance of boundaries, guidance, and adult responsibility.
Some parents who resonate with this approach may describe it as “gentle,” others may not use that language at all. What matters here is not the label, but whether you’re looking for parenting support that is relational, developmentally informed, and realistic for everyday family life.
No. This is not therapy, and it does not replace mental health care.
My work is educational and consultative. We focus on understanding child development, family dynamics, and the practical realities of daily life, and we discuss what can realistically be done within your current context to support your child and your family.
I do not work on healing past trauma or treating current mental health challenges. Some parents choose to work with me while they or their child are also supported by a therapist or other mental health professional. In those cases, my role is complementary and focused on day-to-day parenting decisions, not clinical treatment.
I work with families with children and adolescents from birth through the teenage years, up to around 18 years old.
The focus and framing naturally change with age. With younger children, we often explore development, regulation, sleep, feeding, and early relationships. With older children and adolescents, conversations may centre more on boundaries, communication, autonomy, school-related challenges, and family dynamics. In all cases, guidance is tailored to the child’s developmental stage and the family’s context, rather than to rigid age-based expectations.
Webinars are designed to offer structured education around common parenting topics. They are often a good starting point if you want to understand what is happening, put your experience into perspective, and explore possible options without committing to individual support.
One-to-one consultations are more suitable when a situation feels complex, layered, or specific to your family, and you would benefit from personalized discussion and guidance. Some parents begin with a webinar and later choose a consultation, while others come directly for individual support. There is no required path, and part of the process is helping you decide what level of support makes sense for you right now.
If you are still unsure, you can book a discovery call to discuss the options available.

