Bio

 
IMG_5930.jpg
 

Sensho Wagg realized at age 50 that she had lived and struggled her whole life with selective amnesia of her sexual and emotional abuse as a child.  She is devoted to providing healing and transformative coaching for survivors and non-survivors alike, and safe space for all of us, to express the areas in which we need to heal ourselves and our world.

Sensho grew up in New York City.  Raised in a milieu of theatre and the arts, social justice and humanitarian service, she grew up with two loves:  music, and working to manifest deliberate cultural and social change.

After conservatory study at Eastman School of Music, Sensho began work in a grass roots foods movement for the next several decades.  The movement became known as the natural and organic foods industry.  She and her family created retail stores, a grist mill, and several wholesale delivery companies which sold organic foods and produce in the Mid-Atlantic states.

She taught homeopathy and traveled to Taiwan for education in Chinese herb processing and preparation.  She assisted a select handful of women in planning their own natural childbirth and breastfeeding experiences.

Sensho left the business community to enter a Zen Buddhist monastery for 7 ½ years of training-in-residence in upstate New York.  During part of her 20 years of deep practice and training, she was a professional Nanny in New York City.  Apprenticing with three Speech Pathologists, she became proficient in coaching young Cochlear Implant recipients to speak normally.

After deep introspection and transformation, Sensho recognized that her most profound yearning was to inspire people to find themselves by activating their own dreams.  Earning certification as a professional transformation coach, Sensho began living her own passionate dream of service.

She helps people realize how to express their true voice; how to be their authentic self. She inspires welcomed, and sometimes radical shifts in the lives of her clients.


Click below to hear some of Sensho’s © tracks. Inquiries; discussions welcomed.