
About
About
My ancestors are mainly desert people. My paternal line comes from that most southeastern part of the Sahara, between the Nubian mountains and the Red Sea — a land our people have called home for millennia. Long before Islamisation and Arabisation, the Kingdom of Kerma birthed a legacy of Nubian culture that still runs through us. I carry this heritage alongside my training in Western medicine and my deepening relationship with the psyche.
I am a medical doctor by profession. For over a decade, I worked in infectious disease medicine and epidemiological research, drawn to the rigour of science and the urgency of service. That work taught me a great deal about the body and the systems we build to care for it. But it was through my own journey — through loss, displacement, burnout, and the slow reckoning that follows — that I came to understand how much of our deepest suffering lives beyond the reach of conventional medicine.
I am now training as a Jungian psychoanalytical therapist, with a particular focus on the integration of augmented psychotherapy sessions. This work draws on the depth psychological tradition of Carl Jung, the wisdom of contemplative and embodied practices, and the growing body of evidence supporting expanded states of consciousness as a catalyst for healing and individuation.
Mission
To create spaces — both physical and digital — where the work of integration can happen with safety, dignity, and community. I believe that the most powerful healing occurs not in isolation but in relation: being seen, being heard, and being understood by those who share a reference point for the non-ordinary.
This work is rooted in a recognition that access to transformative therapeutic experiences has historically been determined by privilege. I am committed to serving those who have been excluded from these spaces — particularly women, trans, queer people, and those from the global majority — not as an afterthought, but as a founding intention.
Vision
A world in which the integration of expanded states of consciousness is understood, supported, and accessible to all who seek it. Where the wisdom traditions of the Global South are not extracted or exoticised, but honoured and the journey toward wholeness is recognised as both deeply individual and fundamentally communal: soul-work that can only be done alone, but must be witnessed and held with others to become manifest.