Life and success coach helps people discover their best self closing the gap between where they are now and where they want to be.
A life coach does not only teach and guide his client. The relationship is symbiotic. Together, as a coach and client, we learn from each other. Grow together. Find opportunities together.
I always say to my clients, “Your success is my success.”
Whether that means achieving in business, reigniting your relationship or discovering who you really are. Before you can tackle goals in your career, relationship or health, you must first do inner work to develop a greater understanding of yourself, your habits and how you view yourself and the world.
A life coach views a client’s challenges and potential objectively as the third party, opening their eyes to find the best path for themselves. A life coach acts as a mirror, reflecting with clients to find the answers within them.
As a life coach, I bring the powerful questions, deep listening, and dedication to clients values and goals, helps clients to identify limiting beliefs that are holding them back from unlocking an extraordinary life.
Together, we transform your life into what you always wanted it to be. Family, career, relationships... whatever you choose to focus on, you will discover the tools and wisdom within yourself and determine the action steps to create your new reality.
Together, everything is possible.
Not necessarily.
Coach Phil Jackson was never a better basketball player than Michael Jordan or Kobe Bryant. But Coach Jackson was outstanding at developing a winning game plan, and bringing out the best in his players.
That is the kind of value and expertise I will bring to your life.
The difference between a life coach and therapist is that a life coach sets clients up with a process that may be long or short-term, instead of regular sessions.
In life coaching, a client works with a coach, who is not a healthcare professional, in order to clarify goals and identify obstacles and problematic behaviors in order to create action plans to achieve desired results. The process of life coaching takes the client’s current starting point as an acceptable neutral ground and is more action-based from that point onward.
Therapists analyze their client’s past as a tool for understanding present behaviors, whereas life coaches simply identify and describe current problematic behaviors so the client can work to modify them. In other words, therapists focus on “why” certain behavioral patterns occur, and coaches work on “how” to work toward a goal.
