Calling Clarity Coach
I’ve been listening to people talk about their calling for a long time.
Long before I was a coach, I was a salon owner in New York. For years I sat across from people, doing nail, yes, but mostly just listening. And what I heard, over and over, was this: people who knew exactly what they were supposed to do with their lives and hadn’t done it yet.
They’d tell me about the business they hadn’t started. The ministry they felt pulled toward. The thing God kept bringing back to the surface no matter how many times they pushed it down. They weren’t confused. They weren’t lacking information. They were waiting for someone to take what they carried seriously.
That’s where this started.
They’d tell me about the business they hadn’t started. The ministry they felt pulled toward. The thing God kept bringing back to the surface no matter how many times they pushed it down. They weren’t confused. They weren’t lacking information. They were waiting for someone to take what they carried seriously.
That’s where this started.
What happens in the room
I listen before I speak. I ask questions before I offer answers. I’m not trying to give you my clarity, I’m trying to help you find yours. The answers to most of what’s keeping you stuck are already in you. My job is to ask the question that brings them forward. And once we find it, we don’t stop at insight, we translate it into specific next steps so you leave each session knowing exactly where to put your feet.
I work with Christian entrepreneurs, people building businesses, ministries, and organizations on the foundation of a calling they can feel but haven’t always been able to name. Some of them are vision-clear and strategy-stuck. Some of them are still in the earlier place, knowing something is stirring but not yet knowing what to call it. Both doors are welcome here.
I coach from 25+ years of ministry, discipleship, and business ownership. And I coach from the faithfulness of a God who finishes what He starts.
I work with Christian entrepreneurs, people building businesses, ministries, and organizations on the foundation of a calling they can feel but haven’t always been able to name. Some of them are vision-clear and strategy-stuck. Some of them are still in the earlier place, knowing something is stirring but not yet knowing what to call it. Both doors are welcome here.
I coach from 25+ years of ministry, discipleship, and business ownership. And I coach from the faithfulness of a God who finishes what He starts.
Faith isn’t the backdrop. It’s the foundation.
I’ve spent 25 years in ministry and discipleship, walking alongside people in the work of formation long before I ever called it coaching. What I learned in those years is that the deepest blocks aren’t strategic. They’re spiritual. Fear dressed up as practicality. Doubt dressed up as waiting for the right time. A calling that’s been deferred so long it starts to feel like a dream instead of an assignment.
Proverbs 4:23 says to guard your heart above all else, because everything you do flows from it. That’s not just a verse I quote. It’s the conviction underneath everything I do. Heart work before hard work. Always.
Proverbs 4:23 says to guard your heart above all else, because everything you do flows from it. That’s not just a verse I quote. It’s the conviction underneath everything I do. Heart work before hard work. Always.
A few things worth knowing about me
I was born in Trinidad & Tobago, which means I came to this country carrying the particular faith and tenacity of people who know what it means to build something from nothing.
I homeschooled my kids. That season taught me more about patience, presence, and paying attention to how someone actually learns than anything else I’ve done.
My husband and I are making a movie together. Twenty-six years in and we’re still building things side by side, that says something about what I believe about partnership and calling.
I observe Sabbath. No work on Sundays. I take the rhythm of rest seriously and expect the people I work with to eventually get there too.
My word for 2026 is Hope, not wishful thinking, but active expectation of what God has already set in motion.
I’m learning guitar. Slowly.
I homeschooled my kids. That season taught me more about patience, presence, and paying attention to how someone actually learns than anything else I’ve done.
My husband and I are making a movie together. Twenty-six years in and we’re still building things side by side, that says something about what I believe about partnership and calling.
I observe Sabbath. No work on Sundays. I take the rhythm of rest seriously and expect the people I work with to eventually get there too.
My word for 2026 is Hope, not wishful thinking, but active expectation of what God has already set in motion.
I’m learning guitar. Slowly.
