I am deeply honoured to share that I have been named a Top 5 finalist for the Legacy Builder Award with the Authority Awards.
To be recognized alongside such an inspiring international group of leaders is both humbling and meaningful. This acknowledgement is more than a personal milestone — it is a reflection of the many conversations, collaborations, and shared visions that continue to shape the work I am so passionate to bring forward.

Since returning to school in 2014 to deepen my studies in health and wellness, this journey has been one of tremendous growth, discovery, and purpose. What began as a commitment to better understand the body’s remarkable capacity to heal has evolved into a rich and rewarding path of research, program development, community engagement, and international collaboration.
Over the past decade, I have had the privilege of building systems, programs, and conversations that support wellbeing through education, embodied awareness, and practical self-care. At the heart of this work is a simple but powerful intention: to help people better understand their bodies, reconnect with their own healing capacity, and build sustainable tools for wellbeing in everyday life.
That intention continues to guide my work through CanBeWell, where our focus remains on creating accessible, meaningful wellness education and experiences that help individuals and communities build stronger self-care toolboxes. Through CanBeWell, we continue to explore how movement, music, mindfulness, and embodied awareness can support resilience, regulation, and long-term wellbeing.
This same philosophy also shapes the evolution of Marathon Jam — a growing initiative rooted in healing through music, movement, and therapeutic connection. What began as a creative gathering has continued to evolve into a deeper exploration of how music and movement can support healing, nervous system regulation, resilience, and restoration. Marathon Jam is helping to create new conversations around trauma-informed care, therapeutic arts, and the power of embodied community healing.

These projects, along with my ongoing work in education and facilitation, are all connected by one core belief: when we create spaces for meaningful conversation, intentional collaboration, and embodied experience, we help people build the tools they need to care for themselves and one another more effectively.
This has also been beautifully reflected through Be Well with Dr Michelle Greenwell, now entering Season 6. The podcast has become a meaningful space for rich conversations, practical insight, and shared learning. Each episode is designed to offer listeners thoughtful tools, new perspectives, and accessible strategies to strengthen their self-care toolbox and support wellbeing in daily life. It has been a joy to explore these conversations with guests from around the world, each bringing their own wisdom, experience, and perspective on healing and resilience.

This past weekend, we were also delighted to celebrate World Tai Chi and Qigong Day — a global event dedicated to raising awareness about the benefits of Tai Chi and Qigong for health and wellbeing. It was a meaningful opportunity to gather in community, share movement, and highlight the many ways these practices support balance, resilience, mobility, and nervous system regulation.
This year, that work feels especially significant as we continue to focus on creating a Blue Zone-inspired culture of wellbeing in our community through Tai Chi. By bringing greater awareness to gentle movement, social connection, nervous system health, and sustainable wellbeing practices, we are helping to foster the kind of everyday habits that support longevity, vitality, and community wellness for generations to come.
To be recognized as a finalist for the Legacy Leader Award is a true honour, and one that I receive with deep gratitude.
Thank you to Michelle Abraham and everyone involved with the Authority Awards for this recognition and for your confidence in the work I am so privileged to do.
This acknowledgement is not simply a celebration of what has been built — it is an invitation to continue.
To continue creating conversations.
To continue building collaborations.
To continue exploring the body’s capacity to heal.
To continue offering tools that help others build stronger, wiser, and more compassionate self-care practices.
For that opportunity, I am truly grateful.
