Tony’s work exists within the relational field — exploring the unseen, the unknown, and the parts of ourselves still waiting to be remembered. His approach weaves together embodied therapeutic practice, sacred intimacy, ritual, ceremony, consciousness work, and deep inquiry into what it means to be fully alive. This path has been profoundly shaped through more than 14 years immersed in the worlds of ISTA, Highden Temple, initiatory practices, and plant medicine traditions.

He is a Sacred Intimacy and Embodiment Practitioner, trained Hakomi Somatic Practitioner, Romi Romi bodyworker (Indigenous Māori bodywork) and trauma-informed peer support guide for male survivors of sexual harm. His work bridges the worlds of somatics, nervous system awareness, sacred sexuality, relational healing, and spiritual embodiment — bringing together grounded therapeutic approaches with the deeper mysteries of human consciousness.

Tony’s work is born from both lived experience and professionally informed, trauma-aware practice. Having walked deeply through his own initiatory and healing journey, he now walks beside others — creating spaces where pain can be transformed into wisdom, where the nervous system can soften out of survival, and where the body becomes a doorway back to self, truth, and belonging.

At the heart of his work is a deep reverence for soul embodiment — the soul fully expressed through the human experience. Together, the journey moves beyond intellectual understanding and into the language of breath, sensation, presence, vulnerability, intimacy, and deep inner knowing. Through mindfulness, bodywork, ritual, ceremony, meditation, sacred relating, embodiment practices, and conscious touch, participants are invited into spaces where the mind softens, the heart opens, and the body remembers its innate wholeness.

His approach is deeply relational, experiential, and rooted in the understanding that healing does not happen through insight alone, but through safe connection, presence, attunement, and embodied experience. Drawing from both ancient wisdom traditions and modern somatic approaches, Tony supports others in meeting the places within themselves that long to be witnessed, reclaimed, and brought back into relationship with life.

At its core, this work is not simply about healing wounds — it is about awakening. Remembering who we are beneath the layers of conditioning, protection, shame, and survival. It is about reclaiming intimacy with ourselves, with others, and with life itself. It is an invitation into deeper authenticity, embodied freedom, emotional truth, sacred connection, and the courageous work of becoming radically alive.’

I