Career Counseling & Coaching

Where you start out doesn’t have to be where you end up.

Time is the most valuable resource we have—spend it doing work you find meaningful, sustainable, and fulfilling.

Not your school career counselor.

For most of us, our first and only experience working with a career counselor is when signing up for classes in high school or college. Usually these meetings are quick and don’t allow us the time and space to explore our dreams, passions, talents, challenges, and all the factors that go into choosing a job, career, or life path.

When you’re young, it’s normal to have little to no idea what kind of work you want to do, and yet this is the time of our lives that many of us choose a life path. To think that we can make the “right” choice in our teens and early 20s puts a lot of pressure on our younger, more inexperienced, self.

A young child in a yellow and navy jacket wearing striped pants and sneakers, standing in front of a yellow wall with a large black cursive quote that reads, 'be lieve in yourself'.

Most of us arrive at different points in our lives where we need to revisit and readjust the life or career path we’re on. This is normal.

Young woman sleeping on a couch with a laptop resting on her stomach

Career counseling can help during times of:

  • Life transitions—graduation, job loss moving, marriage, kids, retirement, death of a loved one.

  • Burnout or feeling stuck or unfulfilled in your current job.

  • When priorities and values have changed.

  • Wanting growth and advancement.

  • Struggling to ask for a raise or knowing your worth.

  • Struggling with your workplace, team, or boss.

A person with a backpack walking on a trail through a forest of towering redwood trees.

You don’t have to stay on the path you’ve been on. You’re allowed to pivot.

Thorough this work we may explore:

  • Where you’re feeling stuck, unhappy, and unmotivated.

  • Your values and priorities for your stage of life.

  • Different identity factors that play a role in your decision-making process such as, gender, race, ethnicity, sexuality, religion/faith, and ability.

  • What work and success means to you.

  • Explore, experiment, and prototype with what needs to change and how you’d like to grow.

Ready to talk? Let’s connect.