WHERE
BIOLOGY
             meets consciousness

Hi, I'm Anila — a WEL-Systems facilitator, intuitive energy guide, and NLP practitioner.

I work in the biofield of the nervous system. I help people understand how their survival patterns are held energetically in the body — and how to feel safe enough in that body to finally let them go. The thread running through all of my work is guiding people back to the signal beneath the conditioning: their original intelligence, their creative power, their capacity to consciously author their lives rather than unconsciously repeat them.

"Your pain is not a problem. It is the body's most intelligent communication — held in the tissue, the breath, the patterns you've been living inside, waiting for enough safety to be heard."

What is the work you are offering right now?

I work at the intersection of the nervous system, energetic perception, and identity. What I am specifically looking at is the gap between who someone actually is and the survival identity they have been living as — the patterns and beliefs that formed to protect them and then fused so completely with their sense of self that they stopped feeling like patterns at all. They just feel like me. My work creates a perceptible gap between those two things. When that gap opens, something the person always knew about themselves becomes available in a way it wasn't before.

How did you find this work?

I started in medicine. What I found was a system organized around treating symptoms, not addressing root causes. The body was being managed, not listened to. I couldn't stay in that framework.

What kept pulling me was a question medicine had no answer for: why do some people reorganize completely after trauma, while others cycle through the same patterns for decades? The answer lives in the nervous system — in the survival identities wired into the body long before anyone thought to question them. That question led me to WEL-Systems, NLP, energetic training, and eventually ceremony, where my perception of how trauma architecture organizes in the body deepened significantly.

What has been your training?

WEL-Systems® is my primary formation — a body-led methodology founded by Louise LeBrun. It gave me the conversational architecture and the precision for this work.

I am also a certified NLP practitioner, which deepened my understanding of how identity is structured and how language operates as both symptom and mechanism of change.

I work as a plant medicine integration coach — non-clinical and non-facilitative — supporting people in the gap between what they received in expanded states and what has actually changed in their lives.

What are you looking for under the hood?

I tune into the biofield of the nervous system. Survival patterns don't only live in the mind — they are held in the body's energetic architecture: the breath, the tissue, the habitual responses running beneath conscious awareness. I can read how those patterns are organized and work precisely at the point where they are most available to shift. What I am always looking for is the root. Patterns that have expressed across every area of a person's life often organize around one or two core survival structures. When those are interrupted at the root, everything built around them begins to reorganize.

Who is this work for?

People who know the answer they are looking for is not easily found. They have looked — in therapy, in ceremony, in every modality that promised transformation — and something real happened each time. And yet the life isn't changing the way they know it can.

Not because they haven't worked hard enough. Because the work has been happening at the level of the story, not the structure beneath it. This is for the person who is ready to go somewhere most approaches don't reach.

How does the work actually happen?

My entry point is always regulation. I guide clients into a deeply regulated parasympathetic state where survival patterns stop being invisible and start being perceptible. From that state I work both energetically and conversationally — reading the biofield while guiding structured inquiry. Together we locate the survival identity that has been organizing the client's life, bring it into conscious awareness, and create the conditions for it to reorganize. The client leaves having interrupted the pattern at depth — and having experienced themselves as distinct from it, often for the first time.

What does healing look like to you?

I don't think healing is the right word. It implies something was broken. What I see in people is not brokenness — it is intelligence. Survival patterns formed for a reason. The work is not to fix them but to make them visible, so the person can recognize them as patterns rather than identity. When that happens, trauma becomes context rather than definition. The person stops being the product of what happened to them and starts becoming the author of what happens next.