Joy is a form of health, creativity is essential medicine, and touch is a pathway to connection.
Beauty, to me, is not perfection—it is presence. It is the feeling of being fully alive in your body, at home in your skin, and connected to yourself, your senses, your creativity, and the world around you.
I believe beauty is not something to achieve. It is something we experience.
In the warmth of sunlight on skin. In meaningful conversation. In the pleasure of creating. In moments of stillness, connection, and wonder. The way we care for ourselves can become a practice of cultivating more of that beauty in our daily lives.
At the heart of my work is touch.
Intentional touch has the power to awaken what is often dormant within us—presence, sensation, softness, vitality, and connection. It offers a pathway back to the body, back to the nervous system, and back to the wisdom that exists beneath the constant demands of everyday life.
As a licensed holistic esthetician, Ayurvedic Health Counselor, and lifelong creative, I am deeply interested in the intersection of beauty, ritual, art, and well-being. I believe creativity is fundamental to a healthy life. Making, imagining, expressing, and engaging with beauty are not luxuries; they are ways we cultivate meaning, resilience, joy, and a deeper relationship with ourselves.
My treatments weave together therapeutic touch, Ayurvedic wisdom, facial sculpting, buccal massage, lymphatic drainage, botanical skincare, and restorative technologies to support both visible transformation and deeper restoration. While the skin may be the canvas, the work extends far beyond the surface.
The name Marma comes from Ayurveda, referring to sacred meeting points in the body where energy, awareness, and vitality converge. These points embody what I hope to cultivate through my work: connection. Between body and mind. Inner and outer. Beauty and health. Effort and ease.
I am drawn to slowing down. To honoring individuality. To creating spaces where people can experience themselves more fully—as living, feeling, creative beings.
I am interested in the art of well-being. In the beauty that emerges when we are nourished, rested, inspired, and connected. In cultivating lives that feel as beautiful as they look.
This is an invitation to return to your senses. To inhabit your body more fully. To embrace beauty as a practice of presence.
To remember that you are already whole.