Mental Performance Training—Powered by Brainspotting
For BIPOC youth and young adults athletes, artists, and high performers chasing clarity, confidence, and peak performance under pressure
When Training Isn’t Enough
It’s not about pushing harder.
It’s about tuning in.
Ever wonder why your body knows what to do, but your mind chokes in the moment? Or why your training is solid—but you freeze under pressure?
You don’t need more discipline, mental toughness, mindset tips, or thought restructuring techniques—you need an approach that helps your body and mind work together under stress.
I combine mental performance training with Brainspotting, a powerful mind-body method that helps the work stick.
We train confidence, focus, resilience, and presence and use Brainspotting to help that training land in your nervous system so it’s available when it counts.
Mental Performance Training—Powered by Brainspotting is like unlocking your Ultra Instinct—it helps you go beyond rehearsal, past overthinking, tap into flow, and trust your body when it matters most.
Mental Performance Training—Powered by Brainspotting
From Stuck to Unstoppable
Why You Freeze
You’ve trained, prepared, done everything “right”—but something still throws you off. You freeze, lock up, overthink, spiral, or shut down when it matters most. You’re not broken. You just need to train your brain the way you’ve trained your body.
How It Works
Mental performance training with Brainspotting helps you build focus, flexibility, and emotional control—then lock that training into your nervous system so it holds up under pressure. We retrain your response to stress so your skills are accessible when it counts—not blocked by fear, frustration, or freeze.
Who It Helps
For athletes, artists, and high achievers navigating pressure, perfectionism, or plateaus—especially young BIPOC balancing cultural expectations. Whether you’re bouncing back from injury, recovering from failure, or just trying to get out of your own way, this work helps you unlock your potential—and access it when it matters most.
Train Your Mind Like You Train Your Body
For When Your Mind Gets in the Way of What Your Body Knows
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When most people think of Brainspotting, they think of trauma healing. And while it’s true that Brainspotting can be powerful for processing pain, it’s just as effective for enhancing performance—especially when paired with structured mental skills training.
Mental performance training helps you build focus, composure, mental toughness, and confidence under pressure. I combine that with Brainspotting to help the work land in your nervous system—so it’s not just something you understand intellectually, but something you can actually access when it matters.
This approach works on both levels: sharpening mental skills and rewiring stress responses that block your performance. It's what helps you move from overthinking to instinct, from pressure to presence.
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Performance-related stress—like failure, injury, or public embarrassment—can leave behind nervous system imprints that interfere with how you perform.
We combine mental performance training with Brainspotting to target both the skill side and the stress side of what’s getting in your way.
Brainspotting helps identify where performance blocks live in your brain and body. Using eye position and body cues, we locate the stuck points and process them—often with noticeable shifts in just a few sessions. It doesn’t erase what happened; it helps release the emotional charge so you can move forward with more clarity, control, and trust in your body.
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Nope. You don’t have to explain everything perfectly—or relive every detail.
This work is designed to meet you where you’re at. While some sessions include strategy and verbal reflection, Brainspotting gives us a way to work through the deeper stuff even when words fall short.You don’t need to have the perfect story to make progress here.
Who is this For?
For BIPOC athletes and performers who are ready to train smarter, not harder.
Brainspotting-powered mental performance training might be a good fit if you:
Want to show up fully in high-stakes moments
Feel stuck in a performance plateau
Freeze or overthink under pressure
Struggle with repetitive performance blocks or the “yips”
Feel like your self-worth is tied to your performance
Want to let go of perfectionism but still show up at your best
Are navigating injury recovery and identity loss
Know you’re capable of more—but something’s in the way
Why Cultural Fit Matters in Mental Performance Training
Mental training that understands where you come from, what you carry, and what’s at stake.
When you’re a BIPOC athlete or high performer, your struggle to stay focused or calm under pressure isn’t always just a “mindset issue.” Sometimes it’s a survival pattern. A generational script. A culture of sacrifice. A lifetime of trying to prove you belong.
Many mental performance training programs skip over that. This one doesn’t.
I get what it means to carry more than just your potential.
You’re not just striving for yourself—you’re doing it for your family, to break cycles, to show your worth in a world that questions it. That context matters here.
I work with your values, not against them.
Humility. Loyalty. Self-sacrifice. These aren’t obstacles—they’re part of your foundation. We won’t erase your culture to improve performance; we’ll integrate it into your power.
I don’t rush to shut down your inner critic.
That voice may have been your only coach when no one else showed up. We’ll explore it with care—refining the parts that drive you, and quieting the parts that wear you down.
I won’t pathologize your perfectionism.
Instead, we’ll get curious about it—when it protects you, when it pushes you, and when it starts costing you more than it gives. Then we build something stronger underneath it.
I help you separate your worth from your wins.
Because real mental performance isn’t about going harder—it’s about knowing who you are when things get hard. It’s about staying grounded in and true to your values, even when the pressure is pulling you away.
What to Expect
A Space to Sync Your Brain & Body
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We’ll get clear on what’s been holding you back—and what success looks like for you. Whether you’re dealing with overthinking, pressure, injury recovery, or self-doubt, we’ll co-create a plan that targets both the mental skills you want to build and the nervous system blocks that keep getting in the way.
We’ll map out two key timelines:
Sports injuries or surgeries
Moments of rejection or humiliation (like being benched, criticized, or overlooked)
These timelines help us locate both physical and emotional stress points that may be fueling blocks, burnout, or performance anxiety.
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If we’re meeting online, you’ll need a reliable internet connection, a private space, and headphones if you’d like to use bilateral music (music that gently alternates sound between ears to support deeper nervous system processing).
If we’re meeting in person, just bring your brain and your body. I’ve got the rest.
Sessions will typically include mental skills training, Brainspotting, reflection, and structured prep for the moments that matter—whether it’s game day, test day, or just getting through the week without shutting down.
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We’ll work on the full mental performance picture: focus, recovery, emotion regulation, identity, values, and body awareness. You’ll learn the mental skills needed to perform at your best—and we’ll go deeper to understand what’s been hijacking them.
Whether it’s a recent slump or a long-standing block, we’ll target the root of it. And if talking feels hard or explaining it all feels overwhelming, that’s okay. We’ll use Brainspotting to access and process the deeper stuff—without needing a perfect story.
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Together, we’ll find a “brainspot”—a point in your visual field that’s linked to the stress, emotion, or performance block you’re carrying. Once we find it, you’ll simply stay with it—observing what shows up in your body and mind while your nervous system processes it in real time.
You don’t have to explain everything, and you don’t have to do anything perfectly. You just have to stay present and curious.
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Shifts in breath, emotion, body tension, mental clarity, or focus. Many clients report feeling more in control, less reactive, and better able to trust themselves—on and off the field—even after just a few sessions.
This work doesn’t just help you feel better. It helps you perform with more calm, presence, and resilience, especially under pressure.
Ready to train your mind like you train your body?
Let’s tap into your inner calm, core power, and next level—together.
Fill out some info and I will be in touch shortly. You don’t have to have it all figured out—just start here.
Want more details about Brainspotting for mental performance?
Check out this free info guide I created for clients, families, and providers. It breaks down how Brainspotting works, what to expect in a session, and why it can be so powerful for folks navigating trauma, identity, performance blocks or mental fatigue.
Areas of Specialty
Stuff they say you’re not supposed to talk about
— but we will
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Substance use doesn’t happen in a vacuum. For many teens and young adults—especially those navigating trauma, family pressure, cultural stigma, or mental health challenges—it can become a way to cope with pain, numb out, or feel in control.
If you come from a family or culture where addiction is seen as a moral failing, not a mental health issue, asking for help can feel almost impossible. Shame, secrecy, and fear of judgment can keep the cycle going—and make everyone feel even more alone.
In therapy, we don’t just focus on the substance. We look at what’s underneath it—the pain, the patterns, the survival strategies—and work together to build healthier ways of coping. Whether you're struggling yourself or supporting someone who is, we'll explore tools that help you reduce harm, stay grounded, and take steps toward healing that actually sticks.
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Trauma can shape the way you think, feel, and relate to others—even when you don’t realize it. For teens and young adults, it might show up as emotional overwhelm, disconnection, people-pleasing, shutting down, or self-sabotage. Sometimes, it doesn’t look like trauma at all—it just feels like something’s always “off.”
For folks from marginalized communities, trauma is often layered—with systemic injustice, cultural silence, and intergenerational pain woven in. That kind of trauma doesn’t just live in the past—it lives in your body, your relationships, your sense of safety.
In therapy, we work gently and intentionally to untangle that. Through body-based and emotionally focused approaches, we create space to process what’s happened, restore a sense of safety, and build resilience in a way that honors your culture, your story, and your pace.
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When it feels like everything depends on you “making it,” messing up doesn’t feel like an option. But the pressure to always perform—on the field, in school, at home—can push you into survival mode fast.
For many high-performing, high-achieving teens and young adults, especially if you're carrying your family’s hopes and trying to prove you're more than your mistakes, it can feel like you’re one slip-up away from losing everything. When your future, your identity, and your sense of worth are all tied to success, the pressure can become overwhelming.
In therapy, we slow things down so you don’t have to carry that weight alone. You'll learn how to regulate your nervous system, recover from setbacks, and stay present in high-stakes moments—not by pushing harder, but by understanding what's underneath the pressure and building real tools to support your growth.
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You might feel stuck, numb, or disconnected—or like your brain won’t slow down and you’re constantly overwhelmed. Maybe you shut down. Maybe you overthink everything. Maybe both. Either way, it’s exhausting.
If you’ve ever been told you’re lazy, too sensitive, or too much, you might have learned to hide how bad things really feel. Depression and anxiety in young people of color often don’t look like what people expect. They might show up as anger, fighting, lashing out, doing drugs, partying too much, overworking, or shutting down completely. Sometimes it gets labeled as “disrespectful,” “lazy,” or “out of control”—but underneath, it’s pain, fear, or pressure no one taught you how to name. They can also show up as burnout, isolation, people-pleasing, perfectionism, or never feeling like you’re “enough.”
In therapy, we slow things down and make space for the feelings you’ve had to hold in. We’ll work on understanding your patterns, building emotional tools, and reconnecting with the parts of you that have been shut out or pushed aside. This isn’t about 'fixing' you—it’s about helping you feel safe in your own skin again.
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ADHD isn’t just about focus—it’s about having a brain that works differently in a world that wasn’t built for it. For young people of color, especially those in families that value discipline, order, or emotional control, ADHD can be misunderstood as laziness, defiance, or “not trying hard enough.”
You might find yourself zoning out, forgetting things, saying stuff you didn’t mean to, or crashing after bursts of energy. Maybe you overwork to hide it. Maybe you’ve been told you’re “too much” your whole life—or started using substances to quiet the noise.
In therapy, we explore how your brain works—without labeling you or trying to make you fit into a mold. We build tools for focus, time, and emotion regulation—but we also work on releasing the shame. ADHD support is about more than just executive functioning—it’s about seeing yourself clearly and finally feeling understood.
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Growing up between cultures can feel like constantly switching versions of yourself—what’s expected at home doesn’t always match what’s expected in the world. For teens and young adults of color, especially those from immigrant families, this can lead to deep confusion, isolation, and pressure to be everything for everyone.
You might struggle with feeling “not enough” in any space—or carry guilt for wanting something different than what your family imagined for you. On top of that, the impact of racism, xenophobia, homophobia, or gender-based discrimination can make it even harder to feel safe, seen, or worthy.
In therapy, we create space to unpack all of it—cultural identity, family expectations, intergenerational conflict, and systemic stress. You’ll have room to process what’s been passed down to you, explore who you are, and build a more grounded, confident relationship with your story.
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How we learn to connect—or protect ourselves—in relationships often starts early. If you grew up with emotional distance, chaos, or pressure to perform instead of express, it makes sense if you struggle to trust people, open up, or feel safe being close to others.
Attachment wounds don’t always look like fear—they can show up as pushing people away, getting “too close too fast,” emotional shutdowns, or constantly fearing you’re ‘too much’ or ‘not enough.’ Sometimes, relationships feel overwhelming. Sometimes, they feel impossible.
In therapy, we explore those patterns with care and curiosity—not blame. You’ll learn how your early experiences shaped the way you relate to others, and how to build safer, more connected relationships—starting with the one you have with yourself.
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You know what you’re capable of. But sometimes your mind and body just don’t sync. Maybe it’s the yips. Maybe you freeze, overthink, blow up, or shut down right when it matters most. Maybe you keep replaying that one mistake—or you’re scared your shot at the future is slipping through your hands.
Mental performance training helps you rebuild that connection—so your body can do what it knows how to do, even under pressure.
I use Brainspotting, a powerful mind–body approach trusted by elite athletes and performers, to help you move through mental blocks, emotional overload, and the stress responses that derail performance. This isn’t just mindset work—it’s deep nervous system training that helps your skills lock in and stay with you when the stakes are high.
Whether you’re fighting to stay on the team, hold onto a scholarship, or just keep your future intact, we’ll get you back in the zone—not just physically, but mentally and emotionally too.
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Supporting a teen through substance use is hard—especially when no one talks about it and parents who have not gone through it just don’t understand. People might make you feel like you’re a bad parent, like you’re doing something wrong, when in reality, you’re doing everything you can—often in silence, often alone.
Parents often carry guilt, shame, or fear of being judged, especially in families or cultures where mental health and addiction are taboo. It can feel like you’re failing, even when you’re trying your hardest to hold it all together.
Parent coaching creates a space where you don’t have to have all the answers. Together, we’ll look at what’s underneath your teen’s struggles—like trauma, anxiety, peer pressure, or emotional overwhelm—and explore how you can support their healing without losing yourself in the process.
You’ll learn tools to reduce conflict, rebuild trust, and communicate in ways that actually land. We’ll also talk about how to care for you—because your stress, grief, trauma, and fear deserve attention too. You don’t have to do this alone, and you don’t have to do it perfectly to make a difference. You just have to stay in the room—and we’ll figure it out together.