The wellbeing of a school begins with its teachers.

My work in schools is grounded in the belief that every teacher and every child, regardless of background, ability or circumstance, can be supported by mindfulness practices. These practices help them understand the nature of the mind, the language of the body and the connection with heart. These understandings connect them deeply to themselves, giving them tools to rest in the present, to cultivate clear seeing, self-compassion, and consequently, healthy relationships with themselves and the world around them.
Educators carry so much academic responsibility, emotional labour, pastoral care and the quiet, daily task of holding space for countless young lives. I have great reverence for the work of teachers. As Bowlby and other child development specialists have long recognised, the adult’s presence is foundational: the teacher is not only an educator but a model of safety, attunement, and emotional regulation. From this relational field, everything else flows.
And yet, in the relentless rhythm of the school day, teachers are often left with little time to tend to their own nervous systems, to turn inwardly or to find the spaciousness needed for genuine self-care.



My work offers an understanding of how to cultivate this awareness, how to grow inner spaciousness even in the midst of noise and urgency, and how to tend to oneself with kindness amid the chaos of daily school life.
From this place of steadiness, compassion and embodied awareness, we can meet the complexities of school life with more grace, patience and clarity.
Over the years, I’ve brought mindfulness and heartfulness practices into a variety of educational settings. These have ranged from mainstream schools to homeschooling communities, from non-profit projects with teachers, social workers and marginalised children to individuals needing more focused work at a 1-2-1 level.
My sessions
I offer group sessions, whole-staff training and 1-2-1 training tailored to the needs of each school community. Sessions are experiential, spacious and rooted in practice.
They may include:

The foundation

Each session weaves together practice, reflection, and quiet dialogue. The aim is not to ‘train’ teachers in mindfulness techniques, but to support the conditions where awareness, compassion and a felt sense of self-trust can naturally grow.
This work is not an ‘extra’, it’s a foundation. When teachers are resourced, centred and connected to themselves, they bring that same quality of presence to their students. A calm nervous system can regulate a room. A mindful teacher can model emotional literacy far beyond what a curriculum alone can offer.
In this way, mindfulness becomes a quiet revolution within schools. It is not a programme to simply tick off, but a lived culture of awareness, care, and relational depth beginning with the adults who guide the children.
For research on mindfulness for teachers please see links here: