You’re In Good Company
FIND YOUR PERSON
FIND YOUR PEOPLE
It's participation.
It's a skill.
It's a series of courageous choices.
It's cultivated.
It's co-created.
We met at a game night in Tilly's living room on Valentine's Day in 2013 and have spent the years since creating a life centered around connection.
Over the years, we've welcomed thirteen children into our home through foster care and exchange programs, hosted countless dinners and gatherings, and learned that the most meaningful relationships are built in ordinary moments.
We've come to believe that belonging isn't something we find—it's something we create.
Through friendship, community, curiosity, generosity, and small acts of courage, we build lives that feel connected and alive.
We believe in dinner parties.
Second chances.
Chosen family.
Clunky beginnings.
The possibility that a single conversation can change a life.
And we believe the best relationships are built one sink full of dishes at a time.
Adam helps people get present and back into their bodies.
Adam is a massage therapist who helps people get present and back into their bodies. He has a remarkable gift for deep listening and a way of helping people slow down, exhale, and remember they don't have to carry everything alone.
In college, Adam was part of the recycling club and later spent two years serving with AmeriCorps. Before we ever met, he attended a house concert at Rachel's house (though she wasn't there that night) and was already a fan of her photography.
These days, you'll usually find him barefoot in the backyard with our toddler, rescuing recycling that Rachel accidentally threw away, or turning whatever came in our Sunbeam CSA box into dinner.
Rachel helps people build lives that feel connected and alive.
Rachel is a photographer, relationship architect, and community builder fueled by curiosity, possibility, and the belief that life is better when people gather around dinner tables.
At eleven years old, she started a three-day summer camp for neighborhood kids (her mom had to take time off work to supervise). She was senior class president, loves bringing people together, and spent much of college telling friends she hoped to marry a "bun boy." The first thing she ever said to Adam was, "I like your bun."
These days, you'll usually find her inviting too many people over for dinner, dreaming up new gatherings, rearranging her office for the tenth time, or doing a puzzle with our toddler.
This might be the place for you, if you have a hunch that something needs to change—and are willing to experiment with a new way forward.
Find your people. Find your person. Find yourself.