
What we’re about
A safe space to heal from social anxiety, Complex-PTSD, loneliness, and the effects of growing up with narcissistic parents or life partners.
Have you struggled with feeling invisible, anxious in social situations, or like your feelings never mattered growing up or in a romantic relationship? You're not alone, and this group is for you.
I'm a former therapist, author, and mental health professional who wrote Tell Me I'm Not Invisible: A Story of Social Anxiety, Attachment and Complex-PTSD. This group welcomes anyone dealing with these challenges—whether you're a writer or not.
What We'll Explore: • Social anxiety and loneliness • Complex-PTSD and attachment wounds • Growing up with narcissistic or emotionally unavailable parents • Healing through connection and understanding • Healing from adult toxic relationships
You're welcome here if: • You're dealing with any of these issues • You want to connect with others who understand • You'd like to explore writing as a tool for healing (optional—not required!)
This is a peer support group focused on shared experience and mutual understanding. No one will be excluded for not writing. Everyone's journey matters.
Upcoming events
23

Healing Together: Exploring Social Anxiety, Attachment, and Inner Compassion
·OnlineOnlineJoin us for our first gathering—a safe, welcoming space for those healing from social anxiety, complex PTSD, loneliness, or the effects of narcissistic relationships. Note; I will email the zoom link ahead of the meeting.
We didn't finish the presentation last week so we will continue the same topic. There is overlap between attachment issues and narcissistic abuse. If this doesn't fit for you, that is fine. You will still get a lot out of the event even if you had a healthy life growing up.
I was told that my story was helpful. It is available at this link: https://bwlinks.me/nia
I also have a presentation here: https://bwlinks.me/nii
In the latter, I used AI tools to get an idea what a reader might take away from the book and how it relates to the research and the themes/topics of this group.
Whether you’re navigating life after emotional neglect, struggling with connection, or just feeling invisible, you are not alone here. This peer-led group is for anyone seeking to feel seen and supported—especially as the holidays can stir up loneliness and emotional pain.
🌱 This week’s focus will be on attachment wounds—what they are, how they form, and how they continue to shape us into adulthood. I’ll share some insights from research as well as reflections drawn from my own experience as a former therapist and mental health professional. Together, we’ll explore what healing can look like over time, including the idea of earned secure attachment—a path toward deeper connection, even when secure bonds were missing in early life.
🎧 On a personal note: I’ve used AI tools to create short, narrated videos that bring my book Tell Me I'm Not Invisible: A Story of Social Anxiety, Attachment, and Complex PTSD (link: https://bwlinks.me/nia) to life. I find it amazing how confident I sound—nothing like my trembling hands at Friday night’s open mic! That voice may come across polished, but it’s really a reflection of a lifelong effort to feel seen without shutting down.
The book weaves together personal experience and professional insight. It’s not required reading—and I won’t be reading from it in the group—but if you take the time to explore it between sessions, you might discover how the themes we’ll touch on show up in real, lived experience. If it helps you feel less alone, then I’ve done what I hoped. Again, [the link https://bwlinks.me/nia ] gets you there.
🖼️ Optional: Bring something that speaks to your inner story—a poem, a piece of art, a photo of yourself as a child, a memory, or even just a single sentence. This isn’t about being a writer. It’s about being real. While I introduced the group at a creative open mic, you won’t feel out of place if you’re just here to listen or reflect. The idea of finding photos of yourself is intended to create self-compassion. You don't share them with the group unless you want to do so. The idea is to look at yourself with compassion.
This isn’t a therapy session. It’s a circle of shared humanity. Together, we’ll explore:
• Compassion for the child within us
• What healing and connection can look like in adulthood
• How we might grow trust in ourselves and each other
Whether you speak or simply witness, you’re welcome here.
Let’s begin, together.2 attendees
Healing Together: Exploring Social Anxiety, Attachment, and Inner Compassion
·OnlineOnlineJoin us for our first gathering—a safe, welcoming space for those healing from social anxiety, complex PTSD, loneliness, or the effects of narcissistic relationships. Note; I will email the zoom link ahead of the meeting.
We didn't finish the presentation last week so we will continue the same topic. There is overlap between attachment issues and narcissistic abuse. If this doesn't fit for you, that is fine. You will still get a lot out of the event even if you had a healthy life growing up.
I was told that my story was helpful. It is available at this link: https://bwlinks.me/nia
I also have a presentation here: https://bwlinks.me/nii
In the latter, I used AI tools to get an idea what a reader might take away from the book and how it relates to the research and the themes/topics of this group.
Whether you’re navigating life after emotional neglect, struggling with connection, or just feeling invisible, you are not alone here. This peer-led group is for anyone seeking to feel seen and supported—especially as the holidays can stir up loneliness and emotional pain.
🌱 This week’s focus will be on attachment wounds—what they are, how they form, and how they continue to shape us into adulthood. I’ll share some insights from research as well as reflections drawn from my own experience as a former therapist and mental health professional. Together, we’ll explore what healing can look like over time, including the idea of earned secure attachment—a path toward deeper connection, even when secure bonds were missing in early life.
🎧 On a personal note: I’ve used AI tools to create short, narrated videos that bring my book Tell Me I'm Not Invisible: A Story of Social Anxiety, Attachment, and Complex PTSD (link: https://bwlinks.me/nia) to life. I find it amazing how confident I sound—nothing like my trembling hands at Friday night’s open mic! That voice may come across polished, but it’s really a reflection of a lifelong effort to feel seen without shutting down.
The book weaves together personal experience and professional insight. It’s not required reading—and I won’t be reading from it in the group—but if you take the time to explore it between sessions, you might discover how the themes we’ll touch on show up in real, lived experience. If it helps you feel less alone, then I’ve done what I hoped. Again, [the link https://bwlinks.me/nia ] gets you there.
🖼️ Optional: Bring something that speaks to your inner story—a poem, a piece of art, a photo of yourself as a child, a memory, or even just a single sentence. This isn’t about being a writer. It’s about being real. While I introduced the group at a creative open mic, you won’t feel out of place if you’re just here to listen or reflect. The idea of finding photos of yourself is intended to create self-compassion. You don't share them with the group unless you want to do so. The idea is to look at yourself with compassion.
This isn’t a therapy session. It’s a circle of shared humanity. Together, we’ll explore:
• Compassion for the child within us
• What healing and connection can look like in adulthood
• How we might grow trust in ourselves and each other
Whether you speak or simply witness, you’re welcome here.
Let’s begin, together.1 attendee
Healing Together: Exploring Social Anxiety, Attachment, and Inner Compassion
·OnlineOnlineJoin us for our first gathering—a safe, welcoming space for those healing from social anxiety, complex PTSD, loneliness, or the effects of narcissistic relationships. Note; I will email the zoom link ahead of the meeting.
We didn't finish the presentation last week so we will continue the same topic. There is overlap between attachment issues and narcissistic abuse. If this doesn't fit for you, that is fine. You will still get a lot out of the event even if you had a healthy life growing up.
I was told that my story was helpful. It is available at this link: https://bwlinks.me/nia
I also have a presentation here: https://bwlinks.me/nii
In the latter, I used AI tools to get an idea what a reader might take away from the book and how it relates to the research and the themes/topics of this group.
Whether you’re navigating life after emotional neglect, struggling with connection, or just feeling invisible, you are not alone here. This peer-led group is for anyone seeking to feel seen and supported—especially as the holidays can stir up loneliness and emotional pain.
🌱 This week’s focus will be on attachment wounds—what they are, how they form, and how they continue to shape us into adulthood. I’ll share some insights from research as well as reflections drawn from my own experience as a former therapist and mental health professional. Together, we’ll explore what healing can look like over time, including the idea of earned secure attachment—a path toward deeper connection, even when secure bonds were missing in early life.
🎧 On a personal note: I’ve used AI tools to create short, narrated videos that bring my book Tell Me I'm Not Invisible: A Story of Social Anxiety, Attachment, and Complex PTSD (link: https://bwlinks.me/nia) to life. I find it amazing how confident I sound—nothing like my trembling hands at Friday night’s open mic! That voice may come across polished, but it’s really a reflection of a lifelong effort to feel seen without shutting down.
The book weaves together personal experience and professional insight. It’s not required reading—and I won’t be reading from it in the group—but if you take the time to explore it between sessions, you might discover how the themes we’ll touch on show up in real, lived experience. If it helps you feel less alone, then I’ve done what I hoped. Again, [the link https://bwlinks.me/nia ] gets you there.
🖼️ Optional: Bring something that speaks to your inner story—a poem, a piece of art, a photo of yourself as a child, a memory, or even just a single sentence. This isn’t about being a writer. It’s about being real. While I introduced the group at a creative open mic, you won’t feel out of place if you’re just here to listen or reflect. The idea of finding photos of yourself is intended to create self-compassion. You don't share them with the group unless you want to do so. The idea is to look at yourself with compassion.
This isn’t a therapy session. It’s a circle of shared humanity. Together, we’ll explore:
• Compassion for the child within us
• What healing and connection can look like in adulthood
• How we might grow trust in ourselves and each other
Whether you speak or simply witness, you’re welcome here.
Let’s begin, together.1 attendee
Healing Together: Exploring Social Anxiety, Attachment, and Inner Compassion
·OnlineOnlineJoin us for our first gathering—a safe, welcoming space for those healing from social anxiety, complex PTSD, loneliness, or the effects of narcissistic relationships. Note; I will email the zoom link ahead of the meeting.
We didn't finish the presentation last week so we will continue the same topic. There is overlap between attachment issues and narcissistic abuse. If this doesn't fit for you, that is fine. You will still get a lot out of the event even if you had a healthy life growing up.
I was told that my story was helpful. It is available at this link: https://bwlinks.me/nia
I also have a presentation here: https://bwlinks.me/nii
In the latter, I used AI tools to get an idea what a reader might take away from the book and how it relates to the research and the themes/topics of this group.
Whether you’re navigating life after emotional neglect, struggling with connection, or just feeling invisible, you are not alone here. This peer-led group is for anyone seeking to feel seen and supported—especially as the holidays can stir up loneliness and emotional pain.
🌱 This week’s focus will be on attachment wounds—what they are, how they form, and how they continue to shape us into adulthood. I’ll share some insights from research as well as reflections drawn from my own experience as a former therapist and mental health professional. Together, we’ll explore what healing can look like over time, including the idea of earned secure attachment—a path toward deeper connection, even when secure bonds were missing in early life.
🎧 On a personal note: I’ve used AI tools to create short, narrated videos that bring my book Tell Me I'm Not Invisible: A Story of Social Anxiety, Attachment, and Complex PTSD (link: https://bwlinks.me/nia) to life. I find it amazing how confident I sound—nothing like my trembling hands at Friday night’s open mic! That voice may come across polished, but it’s really a reflection of a lifelong effort to feel seen without shutting down.
The book weaves together personal experience and professional insight. It’s not required reading—and I won’t be reading from it in the group—but if you take the time to explore it between sessions, you might discover how the themes we’ll touch on show up in real, lived experience. If it helps you feel less alone, then I’ve done what I hoped. Again, [the link https://bwlinks.me/nia ] gets you there.
🖼️ Optional: Bring something that speaks to your inner story—a poem, a piece of art, a photo of yourself as a child, a memory, or even just a single sentence. This isn’t about being a writer. It’s about being real. While I introduced the group at a creative open mic, you won’t feel out of place if you’re just here to listen or reflect. The idea of finding photos of yourself is intended to create self-compassion. You don't share them with the group unless you want to do so. The idea is to look at yourself with compassion.
This isn’t a therapy session. It’s a circle of shared humanity. Together, we’ll explore:
• Compassion for the child within us
• What healing and connection can look like in adulthood
• How we might grow trust in ourselves and each other
Whether you speak or simply witness, you’re welcome here.
Let’s begin, together.1 attendee
Past events
4