Bio

I am a physiotherapist, university lecturer, and clinical researcher, with more than twenty years of experience accompanying people—children, adults, and families—through processes of health, pain, illness, recovery, and transformation.

My practice has been shaped by extensive and diverse training, sustained international experience, and a deep listening to bodies and nervous systems in situations of vulnerability.

I work primarily through Clinical Watsu® and Craniosacral Therapy in Water™, integrated within a clinical framework that incorporates evidence-based physiotherapy, neurophysiology, psychosomatic medicine, psychotherapy, advanced manual therapy, and aquatic therapies. 

Throughout my professional journey, I have accompanied highly complex physical and emotional situations, collaborated in clinical, educational, and institutional settings, and trained professionals and teams in different countries. This experience has shaped a way of understanding therapeutic care that combines technical rigor, clinical presence, and deep respect for each person’s individual rhythms.

I am the founder and director of the Watsupath™ Training Institute, an international ecosystem dedicated to clinical practice, research, and knowledge sharing and development in aquatic therapy. I combine this role with university teaching and participation in research projects, scientific publications, and international conferences.

My specialization in pediatric physiotherapy and in working with vulnerable nervous systems permeates everything I do. I believe in a form of clinical excellence that brings together science and humanity, structure and sensitivity, knowledge and relationship. Accompanying from the water is, for me, a commitment to health, dignity, and the complexity of human experience.

History

Watsupath™ did not begin as a brand idea, but as the result of a personal, clinical, and formative process that unfolded gradually over time.

It emerged from lived experience—through the body, the water, and therapeutic practice—long before it had a name or a defined structure. What initially appeared as an intuition slowly became clearer through practice, shared exploration, and the need to give meaning to what was happening in the water.

From early on, water revealed itself to me as a space for deep listening. A place where the body could soften, where the nervous system could rest, and where complex processes could be accompanied with gentleness and respect. Meditation, yoga, and therapeutic work shaped a way of understanding health not merely as the absence of symptoms, but as the capacity for regulation, relationship, and adaptation.

As clinical experience expanded, so did the need to share and transmit. What began as an organic integration gradually took form: the meeting point between Watsu®, Craniosacral Therapy, and the aquatic environment gave rise to a way of working that was both precise and alive. Over time, this integration came to be recognized as Craniosacral Therapy in Water™, understood not as a closed method, but as a living clinical concept.

Watsupath™ grew alongside my own professional and personal development, nourished by real clinical practice, continuous study, and the responsibility that comes with accompanying people and families in moments of vulnerability. Each process added depth, discernment, and ethical awareness to a way of working that has never been fixed, but constantly evolving.

Beyond names or structures, Watsupath™ represents a sustained commitment to listening, presence, and care. A commitment that has matured over the years, integrating professional rigor with humanity, knowledge with experience, technique with relationship.

Today, Watsupath™ continues to grow as a living project—an open space where aquatic physiotherapy and therapeutic relationship meet, and where each process is accompanied with respect, time, and attention to what truly matters.

 

Sessions

I accompany people through very different moments in life: when the body is in pain, when memory feels fragile, when the nervous system lives in constant alert, when illness appears, or when life itself asks for a different kind of support. I work with complex and highly individual processes, where words are not always enough, but the need for care and deep listening is very present.

My way of working integrates body, nervous system, and emotional experience, with wáter as co-therapist, through Watsupath™ and the SuperShrinks™ project—a therapeutic space designed to adapt to each person, with respect, discretion, and depth.

This is a place for those who are looking for more than a technique or a standard treatment. A place to begin a carefully supported therapeutic journey, held with presence and attention.If something here resonates with you, you are welcome to explore how my sessions work and decide whether this path feels right for you.

Keep updated

Join the newsletter and never miss a call for submissions.

We will use your data to send the newsletter. For more information about processing and your rights, please see the privacy policy.