Meet your practitioner, MaryJane
I grew up in a small mountain town in northern Utah, spending my days climbing trees, exploring creeks, and believing that anything was possible. That sense of curiosity and trust in the natural world has stayed with me throughout my life.
In 2001, my partner was diagnosed with stage 4 melanoma. During treatment, we were introduced to energy medicine, and I became both a student and a believer. What I witnessed opened my eyes to the profound healing that can occur when focus, intuition, knowledge, and the body’s priorities come together.
Over the years, I trained and certified as a BodyTalk Practitioner, deepening my understanding of how the body communicates and heals. In December 2019, I took my first BodyIntuitive class, and it quickly became clear that this work was the path I wanted to follow fully. I am honored to be a BodyIntuitive Master Practitioner.
Additionally, I’ve recently completed requirements as one of the first in the world to achieve certification in Advanced Brain Network Attunement, a powerful approach that supports healthy communication between brain and body neural networks, especially when stress, trauma, illness, or injury have caused disconnection. This work aligns beautifully with my passion for helping the nervous system restore balance and resilience.
My curiosity continues to guide my learning. I am actively exploring homeopathy, drawn to its gentle yet profound way of supporting the body’s innate intelligence and healing capacity.
My work is deeply informed by life experience. I come to this practice not only as a practitioner, but as a woman, wife, widow, daughter, sister, mother, stepmother, and grandmother to 18 (extremely beautiful) grandchildren. I understand stress, loss, caregiving, resilience, and the complexity of real life — and I bring that understanding into every session.
When I’m not learning, working, or enjoying my family, you’ll usually find me sewing, gardening, crocheting, reading, or relaxing with a good detective show (British favorites, with a few American ones mixed in).

