
Caring for newborns is not about control, it’s about presence.
My role is to bring steadiness into the home during one of life’s most vulnerable transitions, so families can rest, recover, and grow into confidence together.
I am a Newborn Care Specialist and Postpartum Doula with advanced training in infant development, nervous system regulation, and sustainable newborn care. My work supports families through the earliest weeks of life with calm, attuned care that prioritizes consistency and long-term wellbeing. Rather than following rigid schedules or fast, result-driven methods, I focus on understanding each baby as an individual , responding thoughtfully to their cues, environment, and developmental needs.
I completed Elite level training through the Newborn Care Solutions Elite Program, with additional education in childhood development. My experience includes supporting families with singletons through higher-order multiples, including quadruplets; Work that requires discernment, pacing, and precision that is measured, intuitive, and respectful, never improvised.
Across all family structures, my goal remains the same: to help households move toward sustainable rhythms that support both the baby’s development and the parents’ capacity.
Long before I had formal language for nervous system science or newborn regulation, I was drawn to birth, babies, and the early postpartum period.
What began as exposure became familiarity. Familiarity became discernment. Over time, that discernment developed into the ability to recognize patterns quickly — and just as importantly, to know when not to intervene.
Being present with newborns has always felt intuitive to me, not because this work is simple, but because I have spent years observing how small shifts in environment, pacing, and response can change everything.
That early pull matters less than what followed it: experience, repetition, and the ability to remain steady when things feel uncertain.
I am deeply hands on, present, and measured in my care, with equal attention to knowing when to step in and when to step back.
Families often come to me feeling overwhelmed or unsure of their instincts, not because they are incapable, but because they are navigating a season that demands more support that most people are given. My role is to care for the baby while also creating space for parents to step in and respond in ways that feel natural to them,
Part of empowerment is presence. Another part is restraint.
I intentionally read the room, offering guidance when it's needed. This allows families to build confidence in real time, not after support has ended.
Support should empower, not replace.
Calm should be cultivated, not forced.
This philosophy guides every level of care I offer.
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