About Jacqueline

Deeply personal. Intellectually serious. Built around how change actually holds.

Jacqueline Grace works with women and teens who are outwardly capable and inwardly overextended after heartbreak, betrayal, pressure, identity change, or a major relational turning point. Her approach is grounded in the belief that healthier relationships are not accidental. They can be practiced, observed, and reinforced with honesty, dignity, and steadier standards.

Credential snapshot

  • Master of Science in Organizational Dynamics, University of Pennsylvania
  • More than thirty years of experience across leadership, nonprofits, development, and mission-driven work
  • Longstanding focus on neuroscience, trust, communication, and systemic change

Philosophy Of Change

Clients work with Jacqueline because she respects both lived pain and disciplined growth.

Jacqueline knows what it is to hold life together while also needing to rebuild it. She has navigated divorce, single motherhood, leadership pressure, and the slow work of becoming more honest about what healthy relationship requires.

That lived relevance matters, but it is not the whole offer. Her work is also shaped by a serious commitment to trust, communication, dignity, and measurable change in how people think, choose, and relate.

Relational Wellness

A practiced discipline

Relational wellness is not a mood. It is a discipline of noticing patterns, strengthening standards, and responding with more steadiness over time.

Dignity and decency

Her work is grounded in human dignity. Change does not require humiliation. Directness, honesty, and respect can coexist.

Neuroscience-informed trust

Jacqueline draws on the neuroscience of trust to help clients understand which patterns can be observed, interrupted, and reinforced in healthier ways.

What This Means For Clients

You get substance, not performance.

The work is warm, but it does not drift into vagueness. It is thoughtful, but it is not purely theoretical. It respects feeling without making feeling the only measure of progress.

For the right client, that combination creates trust quickly: a relationship-centered approach with enough clarity and rigor to support real change.

What clients often need most: a clearer way to rebuild self-trust, steadier boundaries, and healthier relational standards for the chapter they are entering now.

Next Step

If this feels aligned, begin with the assessment.

The best next step is to identify the patterns most active in your current season and determine whether private coaching is the right structure for what you want to change.

Best-fit women

Women and teens rebuilding after heartbreak, relational rupture, social pressure, or major transition who want more than reassurance. They want a better internal and relational foundation for what comes next.