Meet Mandi
Life is full of threshold moments. Some changes feel natural. Others are destabilizing. Sometimes we find ourselves caught in the in-between, trying to understand who we are in a world that no longer feels the same.
This was reinforced for me in a very personal way. After two decades of health issues and growing suspicions, I received a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis. While not fully unexpected, it still felt like the ground had shifted beneath me. I was a new mom, had just ended nearly two decades in education to pursue other interests, and felt like I was already in the in between in so many ways. Then everything that had felt like possibility now seemed to be swallowed up by those two words. There was so much to process, to grieve, and suddenly I had no idea what life would look like going forward. It was overwhelming.
Working with a coach gave me space. Space to process, to be asked the right questions, and to begin seeing the possible shape of my life again.
Liminal Harbor exists to offer that same kind of space to others. It’s
a place to pause, to be supported, and to reconnect with your own inner knowing.
So who am I?
I’m someone who is very comfortable with Liminal energy. I grew up in T5 R20 WEL Maine, where the total population was my family, the only traffic was lost hunters and logging trucks, and I had to cross an international border to attend school. I spent my days between two cultures, two languages, and what felt like two different versions of reality. I’m very comfortable holding two possibilities in mind at once and feeling part of either
I’m a former educator with a masters in education turned homeschool mom and Wayfinder Coach. Someone who deals with both neurodivergence and chronic illness who has learned not to be defined by either. Someone who believes deeply that the way forward for each of us is to get past the static of the status quo and connect to our own inner knowing.
I’m not here to tell you who to be. I’m here to help you look at the possible shapes your life could take—and to support you as you learn to listen to yourself again and begin to map your own way forward.
The liminal can be scary. It’s also a place of immense potential.It’s the moment when the old shape has fallen away, and the new one hasn’t fully formed. A moment where you get to define your own future.