There are things leaders carry
that don’t get said out loud.

At a certain level, pressure is constant—and rarely processed in real time.
I work with leaders to remain clear, present, and intentional.

Over time, I’ve seen that when identity is protected and responsibility is integrated,
decisions become clearer, influence strengthens, and leaders stay present—at work and at home.

Brink:Path exists to provide a private space for that work—steady, confidential, and built for depth over time.

I’ve spent more than twenty years sitting in honest conversations.

My approach is discerning, grounded, and deeply human. It’s not formulaic work. I listen carefully, ask precise questions, and help you see the patterns shaping your decisions, relationships, and sense of fulfillment. Together, we slow things down just enough to see clearly—and then move forward with intention, integration, and sustainability.

Over time, the work I do has been shaped less by a single path and more by a consistent kind of conversation.

For more than twenty years, I’ve spent time with people in moments where something real needed to be faced—when pressure was high, clarity mattered, and there wasn’t an obvious place to sort through it.

Some of that was formed in ministry settings. Some through formal study in human and spiritual formation. Much of it came through simply being present in conversations that required honesty, patience, and the ability to listen beneath what was being said.

That’s where I learned to pay attention differently.

To notice what’s underneath a reaction.
To hear what isn’t being said yet.
To name something carefully enough that it can actually be received.

There’s also a creative thread to how I work. Songwriting has been a long-standing part of my life, and it’s shaped how I listen and how I speak. It’s taught me that clarity isn’t just about insight—it’s about finding
the right words, at the right time, in a way that lands.

That carries into these conversations.

Most of the work isn’t adding something new.
It’s helping bring language and clarity to what’s already there—so it can be seen, understood, and carried well.