With nearly two decades immersed in the healing arts, Alicia Allison’s work lives at the intersection of psycho-somatic practice, nervous system regulation, embodiment, herbal medicine, and transformational support. Her approach is deeply integrative — weaving together modern trauma and neurophysiology research with ancestral wisdom, nature-based practices, and lived experience.

Her work is grounded in the understanding that healing is not simply cognitive insight, nor the endless management of symptoms. It is a whole-system process involving the body, the nervous system, the psyche, community, the environment and our relationship to the Earth itself.

Drawing from somatics, yoga, parts work, breathwork, mindfulness, herbal medicine and psychedelics, Alicia helps people develop a more honest relationship with themselves — one rooted not in performance or perfection, but in embodiment, capacity, and truth.

Her work is particularly attuned to the ways trauma, modern culture, chronic stress, and disconnection shape the body’s patterns over time: muscularly, emotionally, hormonally, relationally, and physiologically.

She is known for her ability to track subtle nervous system states and deeply layered body patterns with unusual precision. Clients often experience her work as both highly intuitive and rigorously grounded — poetic without losing clarity, compassionate without collapsing into sentimentality. She brings a sophisticated understanding of how physiology and lived experience intertwine, while still honoring mystery, instinct, and the body’s innate intelligence.

Having supporting more than one hundred families as a postpartum doula over a decade of her life, Alicia developed an uncommon capacity to stay present inside intensity and to guide people through transformation.

She holds a steadiness that allows people to feel both deeply seen and deeply safe without being pathologized, rushed, or reduced.

Alicia’s work invites people into greater freedom: freedom from chronic survival patterns, freedom from inherited conditioning, freedom from fragmentation, and freedom to inhabit one’s life with more presence, agency, and wholeness.

Underlying all of her work is the belief that humans are not separate from nature. We are nature. Much of modern suffering emerges from chronic disconnection — from the body, from community, from cycles and rhythms, from grief, from instinct, from the Earth itself. Healing, then, is not about becoming someone else. It is about reconstructing the conditions that allow you to truly be yourself.