I am a Metis woman from Northern Alberta; my mom is a Cree residential school survivor, my dad is an Irish farmer and 3rd generation Canadian. I was fortunate to grow up a little wild as a farm kid before much technology existed, thus I have a very active imagination and can daydream like a champ. I have two grown, beautiful sons and a fuzzy beast of a dog. I have been working as a Registered Nurse for over 8 years, primarily within remote and isolated First Nations communities and am currently enrolled in the Nurse Practitioner program through UVIC. I experienced PTSD and the beginnings of depression through my work and personal history, and was fortunate to find my way to Roots To Thrive. Because of my transformational experience, I am very passionate about this work and join the RTT team in both a facilitator and a nursing role. I am deeply honoured to be able to be present; to cultivate and hold a safe space while others step into this journey. “Flowers open every night across the sky, a breathing peace and sudden flame catching.” -Rumi
The in-person gatherings of the Roots to Thrive program take place of the ancestral and unceded territory of the Snuneymuxw First Nation at the Hulit Lelum (Health Centre), and also on the homelands of the Coast Salish, Kwakwa̱ka̱ʼwakw and Nuučaan̓ułʔatḥ (Nuu-chah-nulth) Peoples.
Integral to Roots to Thrive’s approach to healing, re-connection and remembering who we are, are these Guiding Principles. By embodying these principles we intend to honour and give thanks to the Snuneymuxw and all First Nations, the teachings they carry and lands they steward, and to join in working for Truth and Reconciliation.