How do we stay human while living inside ever-changing, complex systems?
I’m interested in how we live and work inside systems that are fast-moving, demanding, and often disconnected from how humans actually function.
Much of my attention goes to the everyday experience of being human...in our bodies, emotions, thinking, and in the parts of us that don’t always have clear or tidy language.
I don’t approach this work with the aim of fixing, optimising, or providing answers. My practice is grounded in noticing, reflection, and sense-making, staying with questions long enough to understand what’s really going on.
Writing, conversation, and creativity are central to how I think. They help me slow things down, listen more carefully, and engage with complexity without rushing to resolve it.
My way of working has been shaped by years of building and leading organisations, and by working closely with people navigating change, responsibility, and uncertainty, often within systems that care deeply while also carrying real pressure.
Alongside this, my background in psychology, psychotherapy, and creative practice informs how I listen, notice patterns, and stay attentive to the human experience beneath roles, titles, and expectations.
Right now, my practice is focused on paying attention, to how ambition shows up in the body, how creativity helps us make sense of uncertainty, and how we can care deeply about our work without losing ourselves in the process.
This site is part of that practice. It’s a place to share reflections, questions, and work in progress, without needing everything to be finished or resolved.