The Adult Chair has been a huge asset to me personally and to my coaching practice.

 

The skills and tools I have learned through this model have further transformed me and my work with clients since day one. I will be honored to have the opportunity to work with you towards self-empowerment and transformation as you move through your own hero’s journey. 

 

 

The Adult Chair is a manual for your life.

 

It’s a tool that helps you feel empowered, confident, and equipped with a clear roadmap to your healthiest, most authentic self. Through The Adult Chair, you will understand how your life experiences have shaped you, give a voice to the different parts of who you are, gain greater self-awareness, and respond to life in a healthy way.

 

The Child Chair


Your inner child forms between ages zero and seven, and it is the foundation of your true feelings and needs.

The inner child is deeply vulnerable, which makes it the source of deep, connected relationships. It is also where early wounding can occur, which shapes our view of the world as we grow up.

When seated in the Child Chair, we find creativity, passion, spontaneity, trust, and intimacy.


 

The Adolescent Chair

In adolescence, you begin to develop your own identity and realize that you are separate and unique from the world around you. As the ego forms, so does the desire to protect yourself, whether the daggers are real or imagined.

When seated in the Adolescent Chair, we become perfectionist, judgmental, and controlling, and we develop a mask to hide our authentic selves from a world that seems cold and rejecting. Most of us live from this place until we awake and decide we are ready to change. 


 

The Adult Chair

The Adult Chair represents your highest self: living in the present moment, dealing with facts and truth over stories and assumptions, and being able to set boundaries from a place of patience and compassion.

While seated in the Adult Chair, we can deeply connect with our inner child’s needs and feelings and objectively observe our adolescent’s behaviors. It is here, and only here, that we can become aware of—and overcome—the emotional triggers and negative patterns that hold us back.

Between stimulus and response, there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.

 -Viktor E. Frankl