
About
behind coming home to us

A letter from Caroline,
The work finds us because, in many ways, I think we were seeking it all along.
Becoming a facilitator of this work is something I strongly believe I was born into—it just continued to grow. It has been both a privilege and a responsibility.
There is something deeply peaceful about devoting your life to understanding others, perhaps because you, too, want to be seen and understood. I think being known is one of the greatest experiences we can have as human beings.
Therapy, to me, is intended to be an ongoing corrective experience. Which is why I believe it has to be relational. Human. Soul-oriented. It has to reach the marrow of self-acceptance.
Despite the trainings, degrees, and licenses, identifying as a psychotherapist was never really the goal.
The goal was always people.
This profession has simply given me the privilege of witnessing extraordinary human beings over the years. Those relationships became the foundation for creating a container that could hold more of the human experience.
I created Coming Home To Us over and over again—in moments of inspiration, curiosity, grief, and hope.
In many ways, it has been an equal pursuit to support my clients, contribute to collective healing, and continue understanding myself. Because I believe these things are inextricably linked.
This is human work.
And I had yet to find a space that brought together irreverence, creativity, culture, spirituality, and clinical application into one arena—when, in truth, they had always belonged together.
Coming Home To Us became that space.
Not because I had all the answers.
But because I wanted a place where we could ask better questions. Where being deeply human is not something to overcome, but something to come home to.
xx,
CCG