I've spent my career working with people in some of the most complex moments of their lives — moments where the right decision isn't obvious, the stakes are high, and the people involved don't always agree.

That work shaped everything about how I approach aging-related decisions today.

About Victoria

After more than two decades working with older adults, families, and caregivers, I noticed the same pattern again and again: most of what people are struggling with aren’t clinical problems — they are decision problems.

Families are asked to make complex, high‑stakes aging decisions across fragmented systems, often without a clear process or a shared understanding of “what matters most.” When there’s no structure, decisions become reactive, misaligned, and harder than they need to be.

The Healthy Aging Navigation™ Framework was created was created to give families that missing structure.

My background spans healthcare, aging services, family systems, and higher education, with extensive experience supporting individuals and families through planning, transitions, and major decision points. Across these settings, the same gap kept showing up: people needed clarity, alignment, and a way to move forward — not ongoing management or endless appointments.

My role is not to provide therapy, care management, or open‑ended services.

My role is to guide a structured, compassionate decision‑making process that helps you clarify priorities, align roles, and move forward with intention and less second‑guessing.

If you’re wondering whether this could help in your situation, I’m genuinely curious about what’s on your mind.

Ready to talk?

Book a Clarity Consultation — a structured 60-minute session where we define the decision in front of you and begin mapping a clearer path forward, together.

What It’s Like to Work Together

I listen closely. Then I help you put the full picture on paper — what's happening, what the options are, and what needs to be decided now versus later.

I work to bring as many family members into the process as possible, even when there's disagreement, so noone is carrying this alone. Caregiving wasn't meant to be carried alone, and neither are these decisions.

Together, we'll outline the priorities in front of you — and surface the ones no one has thought about yet.