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"I didn’t always know I was disconnected. I kept moving, doing, surviving — the way so many of us do"
Have you ever felt like you're drifting through life — disconnected, overwhelmed, or just… not fully here? I know that place intimately. I also know that healing begins the moment we choose to turn inward, gently and bravely.
I'm Emely Alcina, and my work is rooted in helping people feel more present, more at ease, and more in charge of their own life.
This isn’t about fixing who you are. It’s about remembering who you’ve always been.
“I learned about abandonment before I learned how to write my own name.”
I was three years old when my world split open. My grandfather had just died — a man I would never get to meet — and soon after, my grandmother grew gravely ill. The weight of grief pulled my parents back to Venezuela, their homeland, where family and heartbreak waited.
But responsibility doesn’t wait for grief to settle.
My father stayed in Canada, trying to manage finances. And just weeks after we arrived, my mother made the impossible choice to return too — to help him shoulder the burden. That decision, made from integrity and love, meant leaving me and my brother behind.
We were left in the care of relatives we barely knew, in a country that felt foreign and loud, under a roof that wasn’t ours, with a language we didn’t speak. I remember the confusion more than anything — the silence of not being able to ask for what I needed, the terror of waking up and not knowing who would be there.
There were no video calls. Rarely even a phone call.
The absence was loud.
What my parents saw as sacrifice, my little body experienced as abandonment. I didn’t have the words — only the ache. And from that ache, a quiet belief began to take root:
“I must not be lovable.”
If love could leave, then love couldn’t be trusted. I learned to protect myself by building walls — thick ones. I tucked my feelings away, kept my needs quiet, and did everything I could to stay safe. That’s how disconnection began for me — not as a choice, but as a survival instinct. One I carried for years.
In school, I was voted “Most Likely to Appear on Survivor” — and life turned out to be just that: a survival journey filled with unexpected challenges.
My path took me from the familiar landscapes of Canada to the vibrant, unfamiliar world of Venezuela, and eventually back again. Adapting to new cultures and languages taught me resilience — but it also left quiet scars of grief and separation, as if pieces of my heart had been scattered across continents.
In my late 20s, I took the courageous step of coming out as a lesbian — stepping onto a path paved with hurt, judgment and misunderstanding.
It was a step toward authenticity, yet it often felt like walking through a storm without shelter.
My wife and I faced the heartbreak of infertility and loss, a seven-year journey marked by cycles of hope and devastation. Every setback left another quiet ache, another layer in a growing emotional landscape that often felt too heavy to carry.
Throughout my life, I’ve faced the tragic loss of loved ones, seasons of isolation, and a relentless pressure to perform — to be “fine,” even when I wasn’t.
People knew me as warm, capable, deeply empathetic — and yet, inside, I often felt like I was barely holding on.
I didn’t always know I was disconnected. I kept moving, doing, surviving — the way so many of us do. But under the surface, I felt numb.
Like I was watching my life happen from a distance.
The question that haunted me wasn’t, “What’s wrong with me?” — it was, “Why can’t I feel joy?”
For a long time, it seemed like the world was full of color for everyone else, while mine stayed muted gray. But something shifted when I stopped trying to outrun my pain — and began turning toward it with honesty and care.
The more I allowed space for my own vulnerability, the more I found a quiet strength I didn’t know I had.
My capacity to feel — once overwhelming — became the very thing that guided me home.
This is how I began to come alive again —not all at once, and not without support, but step by step — through presence, compassion, and the kind of self-connection I now help others rediscover.
There was a time when vulnerability felt dangerous — like a crack in the armor I had spent years building. I was strong. I was capable. I was always holding it together.
But inside, I was exhausted from pretending I didn’t need support.
I used to believe that being sensitive made me weak.That if I just tried harder, pushed through, stayed “positive,” the heaviness would eventually lift.
But it didn’t.
Not until I stopped running from what hurt... and began turning toward it with tenderness.
It wasn’t dramatic. It didn’t happen all at once.
It came quietly — like the first soft light after a long, dark night.
And the more I allowed myself to feel, the more I discovered that vulnerability wasn’t something to hide.
It was a source of strength.
Not because it made everything easier —but because it made things real.
It connected me — first to myself, then to others.
This awakening didn’t give me all the answers. But it gave me something more important: the ability to stay with myself in the unknown.
And that changed everything.
Now, I don’t run from feelings. I listen to them.
I trust my sensitivity.
I make space for the messy, beautiful, human parts of life — in myself and in others.
This is the heart of my work:
To help people turn inward—not to fix themselves, but to know themselves.
And from there, to live with more presence, freedom, and compassion.
And while that awakening began in the quiet moments of my inner life, it was also shaped by the outer landscapes I moved through, especially the years I spent in uniform.
The Canadian Navy was more than a career,
it was a turning point.
A place where I was challenged, humbled, and deeply formed.
A place where I learned not just how to lead others,
but how to lead myself.
I served for 21 years.
Two decades of early mornings, long missions, and shared purpose.
Of laughter, stillness, travel, sport, and service beside people from all walks of life.
We trained together.
Worked side by side.
We showed up through exhaustion, through fear, through connection.
And somewhere in the middle of all that doing —
I became.
I discovered what it means to stay present in the face of fear.
To find courage when you don’t feel ready.
To act with integrity,
even, and especially, when no one is watching.
There were adventures: sports, travel, purpose, and enduring friendships forged in trust and truth.
But more than anything, there was growth.
Not the loud kind,
but the steady, shaping kind,
the kind that stays with you.
The Navy stretched me.
It asked more of me than I thought I had to give.
And in doing so, it revealed the strength I didn’t know I carried.
It gave me more than skills —
it gave me perspective.
The gift of learning from people across cultures, identities, and experiences.
The wisdom of listening.
The power of quiet, steady growth.
This part of my journey lives on in me.
In how I hold space — grounded, respectful, real.
In how I meet others — with humility and care.
And in my deep belief that transformation happens when we show up with honesty and heart.
The path I walked in the Navy taught me about strength, integrity, and what it means to show up — for others and for myself.
But it was the quieter path, the one I followed inward,
that revealed my true calling.
I do this work for the ones who are tired of hiding their pain behind a polished smile.
For those who’ve carried more than their share — quietly, bravely — and still wonder if they’re too much…
or not enough.
For the ones who have felt invisible in a room full of people.
For those who have mastered the art of holding it all together, even as something inside them aches—
for love, rest, for truth, for more.
This path — of feeling, healing, and returning home to myself — changed everything for me. And it awakened in me a calling far greater than a career.
My deepest wish is to gently show you that you’re not broken — you’re awakening.
That it’s possible to move beyond
disconnection,
numbness,
and overwhelm.
That real fulfillment isn’t far away —
it’s waiting quietly within you, the moment you choose to live in truth.
Hand in hand, we can walk this path toward a life anchored in self-trust, aliveness, and meaning.
I’ll stand beside you —
not as someone with all the answers,
but as someone who’s walked this road
and found freedom on the other side.
And I want that freedom for you, too.
“Our stories may be different, but the longing underneath is often the same—to be seen, held, and free to be ourselves.”
You don’t need to have all the answers. You don’t even need to know exactly where you’re headed. If you’re willing to begin — gently, with curiosity and care — I’ll walk beside you.
I dream of a world where pain no longer silences the spirit, where life pulses with presence, connection, and true joy. My deepest calling is to guide you toward this peace — to help you awaken to the fullness of your own life and embrace a journey of fulfillment, step by step, alongside me.
By cultivating self-awareness and gentle attention, we each hold the power to navigate life’s challenges and choose paths of meaningful growth and joy. Together, let’s step into this extraordinary journey — not just surviving, but truly flourishing.
Hand in hand, we will build a community rooted in presence, compassion, and unending growth & possibility.
And while this work is deeply personal, it’s also grounded in years of training, experience, and ongoing learning.
I believe that compassionate care and clinical integrity go hand in hand — and it matters to me that you feel both supported and safe.
If you’re curious about the background and modalities that inform my approach, I’d love to share more.
“Whether you’re planting seeds or seeking renewal, may this be a place where you remember what’s possible when you come home to yourself.”
And while this work is deeply personal, it’s also grounded in years of training, experience, and ongoing learning.
I believe that compassionate care and clinical integrity go hand in hand — and it matters to me that you feel both supported and safe.
If you’re curious about the background and modalities that inform my approach, I’d love to share more.
12+ Years Experience
Private practice & university-based support since 2013
Trauma-Informed Modalities
Trained in DARE, NARM, Narrative, and Family Systems
Trauma-focus Modalities
Trained in DARE, NARM, Narrative, and Family Systems
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“Wherever you are on your path, may you remember—you are already worthy of the healing you seek.”
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