About WHC
Wildflower Healing Circle is a trauma-informed, neurodivergent-affirming healing practice dedicated to helping people reconnect with safety, wholeness, and self-compassion. We offer gentle, inclusive, and heart-centered support for individuals and couples navigating trauma, identity, and personal growth.
Our approach blends evidence-based mental health insight with intuitive, holistic care. Our goal is to meet each person where they are while honoring every part of their story.
Ezra Belladonna
Ezra Belladonna is a trauma-informed practitioner who blends lived experience, professional training, and a deeply intuitive presence. His work is shaped by compassion, gentleness, and an unwavering belief that people deserve care that honors the whole of who they are. He shows up with curiosity, creativity, and a willingness to sit with others through the confusing, tender, and transformative seasons of life. His own journey through disability, neurodivergence, identity, and healing informs the way he supports people as they uncover their inner resilience and create lives that feel more spacious and true.
Jade Belladonna
Jade serves as the Office and Operations Director for Wildflower Healing Circle. She brings a calm steadiness, sharp intuition, and a genuine desire to support others with clarity and care. As she continues her path toward becoming a psychiatrist, Jade carries a deep commitment to compassionate mental health work and to creating systems that actually support people rather than overwhelm them. Her blend of warmth, intelligence, and quiet strength helps make Wildflower Healing Circle a safe and grounded space for clients and community alike.
Jedi Ahsoka
Jedi is the resident service dog who approaches her work with devotion, softness, and an unshakable desire to protect her person. She offers grounding, deep pressure support, and an intuitive awareness of emotional shifts that makes her an essential part of the healing environment. Jedi is also a lover of snuggles, snacks, and being praised for a job well done. She reminds everyone who meets her that healing can be steady and gentle, one supportive moment at a time.