A little about Who I am and What to Expect

About Kyle

A Little About Me

I’m Kyle Megrath (they/he). I work with people around body trust, accountability and repair, grief, shame, relationships, and the complicated work of being human—supporting more honesty, self-trust, compassion, and connection.

I work with people navigating grief, body struggles, identity shifts, relationship conflict, parenting, and the aftermath of harm or rupture. My work brings together years of experience in therapy, community organizing, and group facilitation to support people who want to live with more honesty, responsibility, and self-trust.

I’m a nonbinary, small-fat, neurodivergent white person with Italian, English, and Dutch roots. My social location shapes how I understand power, belonging, and repair—and how I try to hold coaching spaces with care.

What Guides This Work

At my core, I believe this is the long work of becoming human—learning to live with more honesty, self-acceptance, and compassion.

Even our struggles can become doorways. Pain can carry wisdom. Shame can soften. Grief can deepen our aliveness. This is the slow alchemy of coming home to ourselves.

Most of us are responding to wounds, systems, and expectations that shaped us long before we had a say. The work I offer is grounded in a few core beliefs about healing, relationship, and what helps people actually change.

We don’t need fixing

Most of us are responding to wounds, expectations, and systems that shaped us long before we had the language to question them. Seeing that clearly can soften self-blame and create space for change.

Healing happens in relationship

Many of us learned that strength means figuring everything out alone. But people often change most deeply when they are seen, witnessed, and allowed to be imperfect.

Parenting asks us to grow, too

Children do not only need our care—they often call us into deeper honesty, patience, repair, and self-understanding. Parenting can surface old wounds, inherited patterns, and tender questions about the kind of person we want to be. Part of this work is making space for that growth.

Our struggles make sense

There is wisdom in our patterns—even in the ways we sometimes act out against ourselves or others. Understanding those patterns makes new choices possible.

We need to meet our harsh inner-critic

For many of us, a harsh inner voice formed when being ourselves wasn’t safe. Part of this work is learning to meet those places with care instead of attack.

Grief is also central to this work

Not only grief for what we’ve lost, but grief for what was never allowed or safe to feel. As Francis Weller teaches, grief keeps us connected to love—and when welcomed, it can open meaning and belonging.

Accountability and compassion can coexist

We can harm each other, and growth often requires facing difficult truths. But responsibility doesn’t require humiliation or disposability. Repair becomes possible when people are challenged and still held as human.

How I Came to This Work

When I was younger, therapy helped me through social anxiety, self-doubt, and the feeling that I needed to change to belong. Being met with steadiness and care when I felt so utterly unlovable changed my life—and it remains a reference point for how I try to meet others.

I went on to earn my Master’s in Mental Health Counseling and began my career as a therapist. I was quickly drawn to the tender places many of us hide: grief, shame, self-worth, and body image struggles.

My path then moved into community organizing and LGBTQ+ advocacy, which deepened my understanding of power, systems, and the ways our inner lives are shaped by the worlds we move through. It also led me into facilitation—spaces where I saw truth-telling and care soften defenses, deepen connection, and leave people more themselves.

Over time, grief work (including the influence of writers like Francis Weller) gave me language for something I kept seeing: grief isn’t only about loss—it’s also a call toward meaning, connection, and repair.

Alongside that, my own experiences with accountability and repair after causing harm have taught me what it takes to face impact honestly without collapsing into defensiveness or disappearing into shame.

Coaching is where all of that comes together: practical support, emotional depth, and a grounded space to tell the truth—about what happened, what matters, and what you want to do next.

A few more parts of me come with me into this work: being a parent (and being wildly in love with my daughter), sharing this wild life with my wife, cooking for people, being with my friends and community, and my long relationship with community organizing and justice work. Also: insecurity, a long history with depression, and a long history with disordered eating.

I play video games. I like joyful movement—for me that is bike rides, short dance parties with my kid, walks with my wife, hikes around the lake nearby. And sometimes I choose rest instead, and try not to punish myself for it. Because I am still learning. Still becoming.

If this resonates

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