Who I Am
My path has unfolded across two parallel disciplines. Much of my life has been devoted to intuitive perception and the study of pattern — how energy moves, where it gathers, and how it becomes embedded in identity. Alongside this, personal style has been a lifelong devotion. This relationship has been both lived and professional, rooted in sustained work with clothing and image, and in the experience of feeling grounded, confident, and fully represented through appearance.
Over time, these two ways of being began to intersect. It became clear that personal style is not only aesthetic, but informational. I came to understand that patterns within a person’s relationship to clothing offer a clear pathway to recognizing the unconscious habits through which their style has been formed. From this awareness, style can begin to evolve with intention.
These patterns become visible in how a person dresses over time—what they return to, what they avoid, and how they adjust themselves in different contexts. What appears as preference is often shaped by unconscious adaptation. In observing this, it becomes clear how internal states, lived experiences, and inherited roles take form externally. Recognizing these underlying dynamics creates the clarity needed to define style consciously.
I have seen how often people struggle not from a lack of taste, but from a lack of clarity. The issue is rarely aesthetic ability — it is the absence of integration. My role is not to impose style, but to help bring awareness to what is already present and guide it into form. This perspective shapes how I work. I approach personal style not as something to correct, but as something to understand, refine, and build with intention.
This integration of perception and practice became the foundation of the Embodied Identity Method.