The Resonare Living Approach

Grounded integration for the changes reshaping who you are.

Real change does not happen in one dimension. It moves through the mind, the body, and the spirit simultaneously. When life demands something new of you, you need support that can hold all of it — not just the cognitive story, but the felt experience and the deeper meaning beneath it. That is what integrative work makes possible.

More than insight. More than coping. More than spiritual language alone.

Integrative means not isolating the parts of your life from one another. It means understanding that a relocation affects your sense of belonging, that burnout reshapes your identity, that a spiritual awakening can destabilize everything you thought you knew about yourself. These are not separate problems. They are expressions of the same deeper movement.

This work meets you at the intersection — where psychological depth, somatic awareness, and spiritual honesty converge. Not as a formula, but as a living practice of attention.

Mind, body, and spirit brought back into relationship.

Transformation often arrives in fragments. You might understand something intellectually but feel stuck in your body. You might have a powerful spiritual experience but struggle to integrate it into daily life. Grounded integration is the practice of weaving these threads back together — so that change becomes embodied, sustainable, and real.

  • The emotional meaning behind what you are navigating
  • Body awareness — where experience lives beyond language
  • The spiritual or existential layer that gives transition its weight
  • Grief, longing, and clarity as forms of intelligence
  • The ongoing conversation between your inner and outer life

Why psychological safety matters.

As a Licensed Psychotherapist with a Columbia University MSW, I bring clinical training and trauma-informed depth to every engagement. This is not coaching that skims the surface or pushes past what the nervous system can hold. It is work that respects the pace of real integration — and understands that safety is not a luxury but a prerequisite for lasting change.

  • Honoring the wisdom of the nervous system rather than overriding it
  • Recognizing resistance as protection, not obstruction
  • Pacing integration so that insight becomes embodied rather than performative
  • Providing steadiness so you can face what is true without being overwhelmed

Working with the inner system, not against it.

Internal Family Systems (IFS) offers a powerful and compassionate framework for understanding the multiplicity within each of us. Rather than treating conflicting impulses as problems to eliminate, IFS recognizes them as parts — each with its own role, history, and wisdom.

You may have a part that craves freedom and another that needs stability. A part that is opening spiritually and a part that wants to stay grounded and safe. These are not contradictions to resolve — they are relationships to tend.

The goal is not to silence any part, but to develop self-leadership and internal coherence — so that you can move through transition with all of who you are, rather than leaving pieces behind.

Understanding the deeper architecture.

Before becoming a therapist, I spent years in computer science and engineering — fields that taught me to see systems, patterns, and root causes rather than isolated symptoms. That lens carries into this work. It allows me to help you understand not just what is happening, but why it keeps happening — and what would need to shift at a structural level for something new to emerge.

  • Why certain relational conflicts repeat despite your best efforts
  • Why transitions activate old patterns you thought you had resolved
  • Why a life that is "working" can still feel profoundly misaligned
  • Why clarity remains elusive even when you are doing everything right

Interspiritual, reverent, and non-prescriptive.

As an Ordained Interspiritual Reverend, I hold spiritual depth as a central dimension of human experience — not an add-on, and not something to be prescribed. Whether you come from a rich religious tradition, no tradition at all, or somewhere in the complex space between, this work meets you where you are without agenda.

  • Spiritual awakening and the disorientation that often accompanies integration
  • Deconstruction and the loss of faith structures that once held meaning
  • Religious trauma and the slow work of reclaiming what is sacred on your own terms
  • Mystery, wonder, and meaning-making outside conventional frameworks
  • The intersection of queer identity and spirituality

Because major change affects the whole person.

Transition does not arrive in neatly separated categories. It brings everything with it — your history, your body, your beliefs, your relationships, your deepest questions about who you are becoming. An approach that can hold that complexity is not a luxury. It is what makes real integration possible.

Spacious, grounded, and relational.

  • Spacious enough to welcome what is actually present — not just what is convenient
  • Grounded enough to stay with difficulty without rushing toward resolution
  • Reflective enough to see the patterns beneath the surface
  • Emotionally honest enough to name what others might avoid
  • Spiritually open enough to hold mystery alongside practical reality

The throughline is integration — the kind that does not fragment you into parts but brings you into deeper relationship with the whole of who you are.

Coaching and spiritual counseling are not psychotherapy.

Resonare Living offers coaching and spiritual counseling for globally minded adults and couples navigating transition, meaning-making, relational alignment, and spiritual integration. This work can be trauma-informed, psychologically sophisticated, and shaped by Cameron's clinical training, but it is not clinical psychotherapy, diagnostic treatment, crisis care, or a substitute for therapy.

Psychotherapy is licensed health care. It can include diagnosis, treatment planning, medical-record documentation, and care for mental health symptoms within the legal and ethical framework of the state where a client is located. Coaching and spiritual counseling are educational, reflective, integrative, and growth-oriented; they are designed to support clarity, discernment, embodiment, and aligned action.

If you are seeking clinical psychotherapy, diagnostic treatment, or therapy-based care within New York, New Jersey, Florida, Massachusetts, or Vermont, Cameron provides that through Peace Love Wellness, a separate clinical practice.

If you are unsure which kind of support fits, a Discovery Call can help clarify the appropriate path. If you are in immediate crisis or may harm yourself or someone else, contact local emergency services or a licensed crisis resource in your area.

If you are looking for support that can hold the whole picture.

The first step is a conversation. No pressure, no commitment — just a chance to explore whether this approach feels right for where you are.