Trauma-informed yoga, brought to your program.
For treatment centers, recovery houses, sober living communities, IOP and PHP programs, and outpatient practices in Jacksonville — adjunctive trauma-informed yoga for your residents, delivered on-site or at our studio at Vive.
The clinical work is yours. The recovery work is the program's. What I offer is a regulated, trauma-aware embodiment practice that supports both — without crossing into territory that isn't mine to occupy.
Most of what makes a good program relationship is clarity. So here it is, in writing.
Movement is medicine. Stillness opens pathways. That's the work.
What sessions look like
Four common formats. Custom designs available for retreats, alumni events, family days, and specialty programming.
Recurring residential sessions
Weekly or bi-weekly sessions at your facility for current residents. 60 minutes, breath-led, paced for newly sober nervous systems. Most programs run this as part of their regular weekly schedule.
Outpatient and IOP groups
Sessions integrated into your IOP or PHP programming. Can run during program hours at your site, or as an evening adjunct at Vive for clients who can travel.
Specialty and survivor groups
Single-gender, trauma-survivor-focused, or dual-diagnosis groups. The framework I teach (TSTY-certified) is built specifically for these populations. Sessions are tailored in advance.
Family days, alumni events, and retreats
One-off sessions for special programming. Family days, alumni reunions, weekend intensives, retreat days. Includes both the residents/alumni and family members or supporters when appropriate.
Credentials & scope
The training and the boundaries
I am not a licensed clinician. What I bring is yoga and embodied practice with clinical literacy and lived experience as the foundation. The clinical work, the case management, the treatment planning — all of that stays with your team.
- RYT-200 (Vive, Yoga Alliance Registered Yoga School)
- TSTY (Transcending Sexual Trauma through Yoga) — certified through Zabie Yamasaki
- Peer Recovery Specialist certification
- Mental Health First Aid (MHFA), National Council for Mental Wellbeing
- Bachelor's in Human Services, FSCJ — recovery groups, process groups, 12-step facilitation, addiction recovery
- Master's in Social Work, University of West Florida — in progress, anticipated Summer 2027
- Nearly six years sober — lived experience as a foundation, not a credential
I follow mandated reporting practice. I will not provide clinical interpretation. I will not make recommendations about your residents' treatment plans. I will hand off any session material that exceeds yoga's scope back to your team. Full credentials.
Pricing
Straightforward, scoped to your program size. Custom rates available for ongoing series and multi-house programs.
Per-resident sessions
Standard rate for in-house or on-site sessions. 6-person minimum, 20-person maximum per session.
Recurring program rates
Weekly or bi-weekly recurring engagements can move to a flat monthly rate. Email to discuss based on session frequency and house size.
Travel within the Jacksonville metro is included. Outside the metro, a flat travel fee applies. Insurance is not billed — programs pay directly.
How to book
Three steps. Built around how your clinical and operations teams already work.
Reach out
Email hello@renude.us with "Program inquiry" in the subject. Tell me about your facility, the population you serve, and the cadence you're looking for.
Coordinate
I'll respond within 48 hours. We'll set up a brief call to align on logistics, scope, and any specialty considerations for your residents.
Begin
First session can typically be scheduled within 2–3 weeks. I arrive 15 minutes early to set up. Ongoing engagement is reviewed quarterly with your clinical lead.
Common questions
What kinds of programs do you work with?
Residential treatment centers, IOP and PHP programs, recovery houses, sober living communities, outpatient programs, dual-diagnosis programs, and program-adjacent groups like alumni meetings and family days.
How are sessions structured?
60 minutes is standard. We pre-coordinate the population — newly sober, long-term, women's house, men's house, co-ed, dual-diagnosis — so the session is built around who is in the room. Format is typically check-in, breath practice, movement adapted for the group, and stillness.
Do you work with co-ed or single-gender groups?
Both. For trauma-informed work, single-gender groups are often more accessible — particularly for survivors. We discuss the composition in advance.
What if our residents are in different stages of sobriety?
That's typical for most programs. Sessions are designed to be accessible to whoever is in the room — newly sober nervous systems and people with more time can practice in the same space, with cues and pacing that work for both.
What about clients with active trauma symptoms?
The framework I teach is trauma-informed throughout (TSTY-certified through Zabie Yamasaki). The whole practice is built for trauma-affected nervous systems. Active acute crisis is out of scope — clients in active suicidal/homicidal crisis or active psychosis should not be in adjunctive yoga without clinical clearance.
Can sessions happen at our facility?
Yes. Mobile sessions are available anywhere in the Jacksonville metro. Travel within the metro is included. Outside the metro, a flat travel fee applies.
What's the logistics — frequency, duration, scheduling?
Most programs book weekly or bi-weekly recurring sessions. One-off sessions for special programming, family days, or alumni events also work. Scheduling 2–3 weeks in advance is ideal; last-minute bookings are sometimes possible.
What about insurance, billing, or program funding?
I bill the program directly, not individual residents. Most programs pay flat per-session or per-month rates. I do not bill insurance — payment comes from program operations, grants, or scholarship funds depending on your structure.
Can you provide attendance documentation?
Yes. Sign-in sheets and attendance records can be provided for program documentation, accreditation, or grant reporting purposes.
How do you handle disclosures or crisis moments?
If a resident discloses ongoing harm or active crisis, I follow mandated reporting practice and loop in your clinical team immediately. If a session brings up material that exceeds what yoga can hold, I ground the resident and hand off to your staff. I do not attempt clinical work. The therapeutic relationship is yours to hold.
Where to go next
For more context, or to share with your clinical team.