About
Hidden Hues is an Institute of Embodied Cognition
— a place where care, learning, and collaboration are rooted in the intelligence of the whole self.
Embodied cognition means living and learning from the knowing that:
The mind is not separate from the body.
How we move, sense, and feel shapes how we think, decide, and create—and vice versa.The body is a source of intelligence.
Our nervous system, fascia, breath, and movement carry information as vital as conscious logic or memory — especially for sensitive, trauma-impacted, and neurodivergent people.Nature is part of our cognition.
Just as seasons and ecosystems adapt, so do we. Because we are nature, our cycles mirror the cycles of the natural world—birth, growth, adaptation, survival, evolution, collapse, & renewal—all a natural part of the life experience.Relational environments shape what we can access.
Safety, belonging, and attunement open the door to clarity, creativity, and resilience in ways judgement, hierarchy, and isolation never can.
We exist for those whose natural responses — deep feeling, intuition, sensitivity, creative adaptation — have been judged, mislabeled, or pathologized by systems, and for those seeking deeper understanding in areas not yet consistently prioritized by institutions: emotional regulation, self-attunement, intuitive connection, and naturally paced, sustainable ways of being.
Hidden Hues works at the intersection of science, story, and spirit — not as separate fields, but as an integrated way of remembering who we are and what we’re capable of, individually and collectively. This approach matters because it moves us from knowing these truths in theory to living them in practice — creating conditions where people and communities can thrive without burning out.
Want to further explore the gaps in current systems? Check out
➞ Living in the Energy Economy
Hidden Hues isn’t an addition
We know harm and healing don’t happen in isolation — and they don’t follow linear paths. Our work isn’t about ‘fixing’ or ‘getting back to productivity.’ It’s about walking alongside equal peers as we remember how to allow our minds and bodies to heal and thrive naturally. We aim to help you reconnect with all of your parts — between stories, between nervous systems, between people and the ecosystems that hold them.
We are a response — to what’s missing, to what’s been silenced, and to what is ready to be restored.
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Long before clinical systems adopted the term, people experiencing oppression, trauma, addiction, displacement, disability, and marginalization cared for one another through mutual aid, shared wisdom, and intuitive practices passed down through families and cultures.
Only later did psychiatric institutions begin inviting former patients back as volunteers—recognizing that those who have lived through something carry a kind of understanding no training can replicate.
Their presence changed outcomes.
Their care landed differently.
And slowly, these volunteer roles became formalized into paid positions across integrated stepped care models in health and education settings.While it’s being brought into institutionalized settings, at its core, peer support has always been:
relational
experiential
community-rooted
intuitive and embodied
non-hierarchical
Where there would be diagnosis, peer support offers understanding.
Where systems historically created distance, peer support offers common humanity.When peer workers are adequately supported and recognized for the expertise they carry, peer support transforms services & client outcomes by:
Fostering trust & low-barrier, non-hierarchal community
Modelling self-advocacy, hope, resilience, and the ongoing nature of recovery
Grounding care in real human connection
Challenging stigma and reframing symptoms through a systemic lens—not labelling them as individual failings or flaws
Creating meaningful, healing-centered work that turns struggle into shared purpose
Lived experience is not an add-on.
It is a legitimate, embodied, and often intuitive form of expertise.But as peer support continues being brought into institutional spaces, new challenges emerge.
Peers arrive carrying community knowledge, intuitive practices, and nervous system literacy that systems were not trained to interpret. Because peer support workers often “look like” the peers they support and don’t have letters behind their names, their wisdom is frequently invisible—mistaken for naivety rather than insight, asked to align with clinical paces & goals, or reduced to system navigation rather than skilled relational attunement.
And when intuitive or relational practices resemble clinical techniques, peers start being accused of working “beyond scope,” even when these practices are rooted in intuitive healing, culture, and community.
There is absolutely risk to peers working beyond scope & opening themselves up to burnout and retraumatization. However, the dissonance between what peer support is and how peer support is understood is now one of the greatest risks the field faces.
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The risk facing peer support is not that the work is insufficient, but that the structures attempting to contain it are incompatible. It is like trying to grow a living, flexible vine in a rigid, sterile glass jar; the jar’s inability to accommodate growth restricts—and eventually harms—the vitality it was meant to protect.
Despite the essential role peer support plays in lowering barriers to accessing healing environments, burnout rates amongst PSW’s are high and rising. These risks are not individual failures—they are systemic incompatibilities.
1. Misalignment Between Relational Care and Clinical Systems
Peer support is relational, intuitive, emergent work. Clinical systems are structured around hierarchy, outcomes, and liability. These operating systems do not naturally fit together.
Because clinical frameworks were never built with relational, intuitive, or collaborative care in mind, peers are (intentionally or unintentionally) pushed to conform to structures that cannot hold the very thing that makes peer work effective: presence, patience, attunement, emotional fluency, and mutuality.
2. Missing Structural Care for the Workers Doing the Deepest Emotional Labor
Peer support workers offer the kind of attunement, patience, and embodied care that systems often miss. Yet the structural care they themselves require is rarely provided, keeping the work unsustainable.
This includes:
insufficient living wages
lack of mental and physical health benefits
non-hierarchal supervision grounded in lived experience
pacing support and space for metabolization of emotional labor
Because peer workers hold personal and collective trauma, grief, and marginalization within their roles, these missing supports create cumulative strain.
3. Rising Burnout Linked to Sensitivity, Vicarious Trauma, and Systemic Friction
The same sensitivity that makes someone exceptional at peer work also makes them more vulnerable to:
vicarious trauma
chronic stress
nervous system exhaustion
relational overextension
When feedback lands as policing rather than grounding, or when peers are asked to suppress intuitive insights to avoid working beyond their scope, the work begins to feel like a perpetuating of the same systemic gaps peers themselves often needed to navigate. This often leads to disillusionment & burnout. This isn’t a personal weakness—it’s the body signalling systemic misalignment.
4. Clinical Hierarchy Leading to Silencing, Self-Censorship, and Misinterpretation
When peer workers receive supervision & feedback through clinicians—rather than from experienced peers—several patterns emerge:
peers are managed, not mentored
supervisory conversations feel like surveillance
lived experience is subtly pathologized
vulnerability is framed as risk rather than wisdom
peers self-censor their real challenges or intuitive insights
The result is a collapse in psychological safety. The system loses access to a vital early-warning signal: the peer worker’s embodied awareness.
5. Scope Policing That Erodes the Core of Peer Support
Without systemic intervention, peer support will continue to be molded to fit clinical expectations—flattening the very contours that make it effective.
This shows up as:
gatekeeping relational practices (parts language, nervous system literacy, intuitive meaning-making)
misinterpreting ancestral or intuitive practices as “clinical techniques”
restricting conversation to “surface-level” topics
confusing safety with control
This dynamic replicates a colonial pattern: systems extract wisdom from marginalized communities, professionalize it, and then police its original holders.
When information cannot move relationally, systems recreate the very disconnection they were designed to heal.
So what is the real risk?
The greatest risk facing peer support is the erosion of its core:
relationship, mutuality, intuition, and embodied truth-telling.If peer support is forced to fit clinical containers, it will lose precisely what makes it transformative.
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If the greatest risk facing peer support is the erosion of its core—paced, relational, intuitive, & non-hierarchal community—then our work must begin by protecting those roots.
At Hidden Hues, we support the supporters.
We are preserving peer support in a way that honours experiential-wisdom, sensitivity, complexity, and ecosystems of care that clinical structures were never designed to prioritize.
By blending lived experience, body-based wisdom, and ancestral knowledge with visionary design, we are reimagining care that supports not just clients, but the entire ecosystem of healing—practitioners, peers, families, communities, and the Earth.
Our Approach
We focus on restoring the conditions that make relational care possible:
relationship over hierarchy
rhythmic pacing over productivity metrics
mutual respect amongst practitioners over micromanagement
natural cycles over rigid frameworks
These principles guide everything we build, from our trainings to our tools to our partnerships. Our work is not about reforming clinical systems into softer versions of themselves—it is about cultivating structures that sufficiently consider the depth and complexity of healing.
What We Offer
To support peers, practitioners, and communities, we offer:
Relational care consultations, workshops, and training grounded in equity, common humanity, embodied safety, and community care
interdisciplinary tools for nervous system literacy, coherence-building, and systemic repair
Collaborative partnerships that help organizations shift the culture of care from the inside out
We design every offering with one goal: to help care feel like connection, work feel aligned with purpose, and healing feel like remembering.
Our Commitment
Our commitment at Hidden Hues is simple:
Care must be sustainable for those who give it.
Healing must be relational and collaborative, not hierarchical.
And systems must evolve to honour human connection as the foundation of wellbeing—not conformity to the norm.
We are here to restore what is essential so peer support can thrive — not in spite of the system, but beyond the limits of the system that still constrain it.
How We’re Doing Things Differently
Most care systems see peer support as an add-on
— we treat it as the foundation.
As peer support workers, everyone at Hidden Hues has not only witnessed the gaps in care systems & relationships — we’ve lived them. We have felt the cost of speed, uniformity, and individualism often perpetuated within clinical spaces & understand the risks of care that does not leave space to process, integrate, or see everyone in their full complexity.
That’s why:
Where others ask peers to “fit in” with established clinical paces, we ask how systems can shift towards collective sustainability.
Where others measure success through outcomes, we prioritize safety—in healing spaces, in your body, & with your communities.
Where others separate science and spirit, we find language that integrates—alongside lived wisdom, somatics, & cultural context.
We’re not building around fractured systems.
We’re reimagining something new.
Our Why
Disconnection from nature is disconnection from ourselves and natural cycles. It shows up as stress, illness, and fragmentation in our bodies, relationships, and communities. Those impacts are felt first and most intensely by those we’ve often labelled as whistleblowers — the marginalized, trauma-impacted, neurodivergent, disabled, lower-income groups, and AFAB people.
These demographics are not weaker or defective. At Hidden Hues, we see them as the ones who have not been considered by the systems we are all swimming within — education, medicine, law, and other institutions — for far too long. And the impacts of ignoring their wisdom? We’re experiencing them now, collectively, in our own small, individual manifestations — our own unique hues.
Our name and logo reflect this truth. Hidden Hues speaks to the unseen or exiled parts of self and society — sensitivities, wisdoms, and ways of knowing that dominant systems have overlooked — intentionally or not. The flower growing through cracked pavement in our logo symbolizes the beautiful growth that emerges from fractures: with roots below the surface and hands as leaves, it represents guidance, holding, and intuitive, paced growth.
Our Offerings
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1. Support for Supporters:
Sustaining others starts with being sustained yourself.At Hidden Hues, we know the emotional labour of peer support is both powerful and taxing. Our Support for Supporters sessions are designed specifically for peer support workers, caregivers, clinicians, and holistic practitioners who are often left without the care they offer to others.
Whether you're navigating burnout, role confusion, boundary fatigue, or simply craving a space where you don’t have to hold it all—this offering is here for you.
— We tend to the nervous system, not just the job description.
— We support the human behind the helper.2. Relational Care Services
Come as you are.You don’t need a diagnosis, a crisis, or the perfect words. If you're feeling overwhelmed, misunderstood, disconnected from yourself or the world around you—this space is for you.
Hidden Hues offers one-on-one relational care rooted in lived experience, sensitivity, and relational care. We don’t pathologize pain or rush your process. We walk with you through complexity, not around it.
These sessions are for anyone seeking companionship in their healing—especially those who are highly sensitive, trauma-impacted, neurodivergent, or simply tired of navigating alone.
— We meet you where you are, and move at your pace.
— You don’t have to hold it all by yourself anymore. -
(with Samuel Gini)
These sessions provide a gentle, body-led space focused on reconnection, regulation, and energetic rebalancing. Each session draws from a blend of Reiki, Shiatsu-informed bodywork, and Sam's intuitive energetic attunement.
Length: 60–120 minutes
Format: Virtual (in-person coming soon in Greater Vancouver)
Accessibility: Sliding scale available -
(with Cassandra Lucke)
Purpose: Expanded self-understanding through guided awareness
Focus: Inner dialogue · pattern recognition · energetic coherence
What it is
A gentle, structured exploration that helps you meet the layers beneath ordinary perception—thought, emotion, memory, and energy—as information rather than confusion. You remain aware and in control; the process is conversational, not hypnotic.
How a session flows
Ground & Orient – set intentions, clarify comfort needs, establish pacing.
Guided Descent – breath and sensory cues ease the mind into expanded focus.
Exploration – follow images, sensations, or insights with curiosity; connect them to present-day patterns.
Integration – translate discoveries into clear actions or supportive practices.
Intentions
Identify the beliefs or energetic loops that keep certain patterns repeating.
Re-establish a felt sense of inner guidance and regulation.
Leave with personalized integration notes and one simple next step.
Formats
Quantum Clarity Session · 75 min · one core question + written integration summary
Spiral Mapping × Quantum Series · 3 × 75 min · pattern exploration across time
Deep Repatterning Journey · 90 min · for major life thresholds or transitions
Who it commonly supports
Neurodivergent, highly sensitive, fatigued, or recovering nervous systems; anyone already practicing self-reflection who feels ready for deeper integration.
Sliding scale · sensory-friendly · plain-language notes included.
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Where Energy Meets Awareness.
These co-facilitated sessions bridge physical and psychological energy work to restore coherence across body, mind, and spirit.
Through Samuel’s Reiki and Shiatsu, you’ll experience the rebalancing of physical energy flow and somatic attunement. Through Cassandra’s quantum healing and consciousness facilitation, grounded in neuroplasticity, natural rhythms, and the multidimensional wisdom of balance and diversity, you’ll be guided through an intuitive process of energetic realignment and expanded self-awareness.
Together, we hold space for your system to remember its natural rhythm of harmony, coherence, and connection—within yourself and the greater field of life.
Each session is personalized: you may choose to work with one of us or both, depending on your needs and intentions.
We bridge the physical and the quantum, the somatic and the spiritual.
We support your return to coherence, alignment, and embodied wholeness.
— Click here to learn more about quantum consciousness.
— Click here to learn more about quantum healing.
— Click here to learn more about energy attunement. -
COMING SOON!
Relational. Rhythmic. Rooted in Shared, Lived Experiences.
These are not your typical peer support trainings. Our Expanded Peer Support Trainings go beyond scripts and protocols to teach the relational, energetic, and systemic skills required to offer sustainable care.
Grounded in trauma-informed practice, ecosystemic thinking, and intuitive intelligence, these trainings are for those ready to unlearn clinical rigidity and embody care that is alive, reciprocal, and deeply human.
Perfect for emerging or experienced peer workers, facilitators, and support-based practitioners looking to deepen their relational practice.
Interested in enrolling in our expanded peer support trainings? Click here to join our waitlist!
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For practitioners, educators, caregivers & systems shapers.
You can’t change a system from the outside—but you can reshape it from within, when you’re guided by those who’ve lived it.
Our consultations support professionals, teams, and institutions who want to integrate lived experience into their work with humility, depth, and authenticity.
Whether you're building programs, reworking curriculum, shifting clinical culture, or simply trying to understand what support really feels like—we're here to walk beside you.
Let us help you bridge the gap between intention and impact.
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COMING SOON!
Rooted in reflection. Designed for reconnection.
Our workshops are immersive learning experiences that weave science, spirit, story, and sensitivity.
Offered in seasonal cycles, each workshop explores a facet of reconnection—from reinhabiting the body after trauma, to rebuilding our relationships with land, lineage, and energy.
Whether you’re a practitioner, peer, or simply a curious human walking your healing path, our workshops offer frameworks, tools, and shared space for becoming more whole.
Interested in enrolling in our relational care workshops? Click here to sign up for our waitlist!