How Claudia got here
I've known since childhood that I perceived things differently. I grew up in Germany seeing what others didn't, and the response from people around me was mostly alarm — neighbors warning my parents, teachers misreading my attention as absence. I wasn't absent. I was somewhere else entirely.
I spent years trying to normalize myself: theology studies first, then business school, then a career in HR and consultancy in Europe. I was good at all of it. But the gifts didn't go anywhere — I just got better at carrying them quietly.
The turn came in my late twenties, when a chance encounter with someone who shared a similar inner life cracked things open. I started exploring deliberately what I'd been experiencing passively. I founded a school in Germany for burned-out managers — Dascalos — because I could see what the professional world does to people and I wanted to offer something real in response.
Then, at 35, I emigrated to the United States, following what I can only describe as a clear inner instruction. I arrived without fluency in the culture, without a working permit, and with a practice built entirely on healing rather than readings. Spirit, as I've come to understand it, had other plans. I had to learn to trust what I was receiving and say it out loud, in a second language, to strangers.
What I've found, after all these years, is that almost everything people bring to me — the desire for predictions, the need for clarity, the hope that something will shift — is fundamentally a need for safety. To feel held. To know they can navigate what's coming.
I read the energy field around a person's life timeline, from patterns formed early to crossroads still ahead, and I help them understand what's actually at work beneath their circumstances.
The work is practical. I record sessions so people can return to them over years. I care whether what emerges is usable, not just interesting. I'm a soul empath with the capacity to work across past-life influences, present patterns, and probable futures — but none of that is the point.
The point is that people leave with something they didn't have before: a clearer sense of who they are, what they're carrying, and what they're actually capable of. I came here to help reduce suffering. That's still what I'm doing.