Sarah was born in London’s Westminster Hospital, where her mother worked in the pharmacy preparing medicated solutions, ointments and creams. As a child she spent time in Borneo, when her father’s job for an international construction company took the family abroad. There was very little academia there but seeds of a different kind were sown, a growing interest in science and humanity which led her to take a BSc in Biochemistry.
Working with laboratory based biochemistry, Sarah found the working environment intellectually engaging but lacking in something more creative. This state of affairs gradually turned the direction of her career towards something inclusive of her artistic side. Sarah’s initial answer was to become a model-maker for Mallards, a London based company, set up to create models for photographers and advertising companies. Still not quite in her niche, she later joined the post-production department at the BBC, becoming a senior recording operator and editors’ assistant. Following the company’s restructuring and seeing a changing role ahead of her at work, Sarah took the opportunity to move with her husband to France to start a family. Motherhood further engaged her ever enquiring mind and she began to make notes of the times when her children ate, slept and woke. She started to see their bio-rhythmic patterns, noticing how they changed each week with their growth and development, and realised she was beginning to find her career.
After a move to Oxfordshire to be closer to family and career opportunities, Sarah looked for something to combine her intuitive, compassionate nature with her introspective, analytical tenacity for perfection. Around this time a friend introduced her to Kinesiology which brought these elements together. By stepping into the complementary approach to life after a background in science, she began to understand life’s biological processes and their connection to humanitarian philosophy. Her experiences from both systems of thinking, conventional and complementary, started to knit together to form a new way of approaching healing.
After completing her studies of Systematic Kinesiology to strengthen and deepen this way of working, she further expanded her studies and combined it with the art of remedy-making. She continued in this way until she had developed the necessary experience to introduce her ground-breaking remedy work into a practical, effective and logical system of healing.