Access as feeling
My work comes from lived experience of moving through spaces that don’t always feel accessible — even when they are described that way.
I’m interested in the gap between what a space intends and how it is actually experienced.
Access isn’t always visible.
Sometimes it shows up as leaving early,
as not quite settling,
as a space that looks open but doesn’t feel it.
I work in those moments — thinking about how environments shape our bodies, attention, and ability to stay.
My practice
I work across writing, creative practice, and accessibility, exploring:
- invisible disabilities and chronic illness
- sensory experience and overwhelm
- how access is felt, not just implemented
- how creative and learning spaces can hold difference
My approach is not about fixing spaces from the outside, but about noticing — and responding to — what is already happening within them.
Alongside this, I develop projects such as Pleasure Party and Access Tarot, which explore more intuitive and relational approaches to access.
If you’d like to work together, you can get in touch here →
(link to Work With Me)