#DareMethod and Self-Image
The DareMethod delves into all aspects of your self-image—how you see yourself publicly, ideally, and currently. We explore how these images shape your reality and by shifting your self-perception, enhance your creativity and adaptability to change.
Our unique approach uses photography to capture an image of you, prompting reflection on the unknown aspects of yourself and addressing the fears associated with them. This process reveals why we cling to certain self-definitions and the benefits of embracing a more fluid, undefined self.
At its core, the DareMethod operates on the belief that you are pure awareness, not just an image. By reframing how you see yourself, you gain mastery over the images in your life rather than being controlled by them.
The results include enhanced self-awareness, a clearer understanding of how images influence you, improved relationships, deeper connections with others, increased productivity, better self-expression, and a renewed excitement for your work and life.
In her own words...
It might sound very controversial coming from a photographer who has been working with images for the last 10+ years, but the most important skill for all of us to develop in the coming years is self-liberation from any mental images we have of ourselves and others.
If you trace back the history of the world it becomes very apparent that we’ve been assigning a lot of value to the physical image, to appearance, to the power of mind over any immaterial, intuitive and imaginary realms of being which essentially contributed to the growing separation among people.
TESTIMONIALS
A Coach Who Photographs: The Power of Photography in Coaching
An Article published by ICF (International Coaching Federation)
“In all our relationships each one of us builds an image about the other and these two images have relationship, not the human beings themselves… The actual relationship between two human beings or between many human beings completely ends when there is the formation of images.”
– Jiddu Krishnamurti, Freedom from the Known