Elloa Atkinson
Elloa Atkinson is a life-changing coach, an inspiring speaker, and a writer whose work has gone viral on both the Huffington Post and the Good Men Project.
Elloa has over a decade’s experience in education and training, is qualified to teach English as a foreign language at University level and is two thirds of the way through a cutting edge accredited diploma in transpersonal counselling psychology.
A certified life coach, Elloa also has over ten years’ experience of assisting, supporting and leading emotionally intense personal development work, including cathartic breathwork, psychodrama, gestalt-based work and person-centred counselling approaches.
Having entered addiction recovery aged 18, Elloa spent a number of years exploring the spiritual dilemma underpinning her own addiction and eating disorder before choosing not to identify as an addict in recovery but as a human being learning to reclaim and embody her whole Self.
In her early to mid twenties, Elloa explored Christianity, the Five Rhythms and shamanism in depth, and would continuously circle back around toACIM. Today, the principles and teachings of ACIM underpin Elloa’s worldview and informs the framework within which she works with individuals and groups. She believes we live in a friendly universe and that each of us is whole, innocent and enough and that our core problem, and the only one that ever really needs solving, is that we have forgotten that.
Elloa writes, speaks and teaches about spirituality and waking up, conscious relationships, and becoming reunited with your whole Self. She believes that until you reclaim the parts of yourself that you discarded long ago, you will not feel whole — even though you are.
In 2015, Elloa created the Fearless Expression movement, which encompasses the very vulnerable, tender work of showing up without a mask in full authenticity, and also encourages fierce, wild, unapologetic self-expression.
Check out her work here:
The Academy of Miracles Podcast
(photo of flags by Michelle Wildman Photography; flags by Lori Portka)