Appreciation
It’s a privilege to work with women who are powerful, perceptive, generous, and brave, often in ways the world doesn’t fully see.
The words below aren’t just testimonials; they’re reflections of the internal shifts that happen when women no longer have to manage how they’re perceived—and instead, get to come home to themselves.
Here’s what some of these extraordinary women have shared about our work together.
I didn’t realize how much of myself I’d pushed aside until I stopped pretending everything was fine. Holding it all together had become so normal that I forgot it was a performance. I was respected, successful, and completely out of touch with how I actually felt. I didn’t have to explain or prove anything to Jenny. I could finally just sit down, breathe, and let the noise fall away. Something shifted in that quiet. I started making decisions that actually reflected what I wanted, not what was expected of me. These days, I don’t speak to be impressive. I speak when it matters. I feel steady in a way I never did before.
Linda, 50, Global Marketing Executive
Jenny doesn’t offer neat frameworks or shiny answers. What she does is hold up a mirror in the gentlest, clearest way—one that made me finally see myself again. I’ve done years of work—therapy, coaching, leadership retreats—but nothing ever cut through the noise like this did. It wasn’t dramatic. It was cellular. I walk differently. I speak differently. I don’t brace for life anymore—I meet it.
Sara, 46, Tech Founder & Investor
For years, I was excellent at being whoever the room needed me to be. The title, the tone, the performance. I knew how to read the air and disappear into it. But somewhere along the way, I forgot who I actually was. Jenny didn’t try to pull her version of me out. She just held space until mine showed up. And when she did, I didn’t look away. This woman is softer, wiser, and real.
Isabel, 44, Nonprofit Founder
I was always the one people looked to for answers; always had a plan, always in motion. But behind the momentum was this low-level question I couldn’t shake: “Why doesn’t any of this feel right anymore?” I didn’t know what was missing—just that something was. Working with Jenny was like lowering the volume on everyone else’s voices so I could finally hear my own. There was no big reveal. Just honesty, over and over again, until the noise fell away. What’s left now feels solid, quiet, and clear. I lead differently and for the first time, it feels like it’s actually me leading.
Danielle, 47, Private Equity Partner
Honestly, I came in skeptical. I’ve built businesses, mentored leaders, and done more personal development than I can count, but Jenny’s work went somewhere deeper. She knows how to hold powerful women in their most vulnerable moment, without ever diminishing their strength. She met me in the space between who I was and who I wanted to become, and I left changed. There’s a grace to her presence, an intentionality that makes you want to be braver with your truth. I wouldn’t call it coaching, I’d call it finding a part of myself I didn’t know was missing.
Rina, 52, Serial Entrepreneur & Impact Investor
It’s hard to explain the relief of being in a room where you don’t have to manage perception. I didn’t even realize how much I was performing until I wasn’t. Jenny gave me that space. I stopped over-explaining. I started listening to my body, REALLY listening, and honoring what it needed. I’ve let go of so much noise. The woman I see now in the mirror doesn’t need to hold it all together. She just gets to be and that’s enough.
Nadine, 58, Wealth Manager & Legacy Consultant
The search for clarity brought me to Jenny. What I found was something quieter but so much more powerful: permission. To rest, to not know, to stop gripping so tightly. I had built my success on tension and urgency and suddenly, I didn’t want to live that way anymore. With Jenny, I softened without disappearing. I stopped apologizing for needing space. I remembered that I don’t have to push to be heard. Who I am now feels lighter, but somehow stronger, too.
Amelia, 53, Media Executive