Rather than offering one fixed philosophy or way of being, my intention is to create spaces that feel open, grounding and inspiring. Spaces where people can discover what genuinely resonates with them — through experiences, conversations, collaborations, carefully chosen objects and shared moments of presence.
I don’t see myself as someone with all the answers. I feel more at home in the role of curator, connector and host — bringing together people, ideas and practices that invite a deeper sense of belonging: within ourselves, with each other and in the way we move through the world.
At its core, House of Self is simply an invitation to live a little more consciously, a little more honestly and a little more in tune with what feels real.
I’ve always been drawn to the spaces where worlds meet — where inner life and outer expression begin to mirror one another.
Growing up between cultures as a German in Brazil, later living in Belgium, London and New York, I was shaped early on by movement, contrast and curiosity. My background in design and years working within fashion and brand representation gave me a deep appreciation for aesthetics, storytelling and the emotional way environments, objects and personal style can influence how we feel. At the same time, I found myself searching for something deeper beneath the surface of achievement, identity and expectation.
Through yoga, mindfulness, Buddhism, Ayurveda Human Design and years of personal exploration, I began to understand authenticity not as something we achieve, but something we slowly return to — often by letting go of who we thought we had to be.
What started as Homelistic Living became an exploration of this connection between the spaces we inhabit internally and externally. Over time, that vision expanded naturally into something broader: a platform for thoughtful living, meaningful connection and conscious curation.
House of Self brings together many of the things that have shaped my own path — movement, conversation, design, wellbeing, personal style, rituals, community and cultural exchange. Not as separate categories, but as interconnected ways of expressing who we are and how we want to live.