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Allow your inner self to bloom

Independent Spiritual Care offers a wide array of services for individuals, groups, and organisations. See below for more details- better yet, get in touch. I look forward to serving.

Community based care

Private, one-on-one sessions in a setting that suits your needs. Soulful, person-centred care tailored to you.

Fitness Center

Custom programs built for you.

Full Day Spa

5,000 square feet of pure bliss.

Education

  • Spiritual care in any context
  • Assessments, plans, and progress notes
  • Palliative and end-of-life issues
  • Multi faith and cultural issues in spiritual care

Critical Incidents

  • Spiritual care response available for organisations or governments:
    • Disasters
    • Emergencies
    • Violence and crime
    • Work-related trauma

Ritual

  • Funerals
  • Memorials
  • Rituals for closure and celebration
  • Rituals for climate change and grief
  • Interfaith presence

Ministry

  • Supply ministry by request
  • Facilitation of ANZAC and Remembrance Days ceremonies
  • Interfaith ministerial presence at rituals, ceremonies, etc.

Pricing

Private Session

Time + Presence + Kindness - Life changes - Loneliness - End-of-life planning - Grief and bereavement

$120/hr

Locum

Half or full day - Aged Care - Hospitals - Palliative Care - Organisations - GPs and Community Health Centres - Prisons and Justice Centres

$90/hr

Education

In-person sessions - Spiritual Care - End-of-life Care - Notes, Assessments, & Plans

$90/hr - Two hour minimum

Healing through
Restorative Presence

I support emotional, mental, and spiritual wellbeing at any stage of life. I am an SCA-certified Spiritual Care Practitioner and ordained by One Spirit Interfaith Seminary in New York City. This means that I care about the person in front of me and what matters to them, not about evangelising or “selling” a particular religion, culture, or identity.

Read more ➔

We continually move backward and forward in time as we use our stories to describe who we were, who we are, and what we hope we will become.

John SwintonDementia: Living in the Memories of God

Ultimately, we have just one moral duty: to reclaim large areas of peace in ourselves, more and more peace, and to reflect it toward others. And the more peace there is in us, the more peace there will also be in our troubled world.

Etty HillesumAn Interrupted Life