Meet Dr. Abeer Fahim
Certified Life Coach, Author, Certified Meditation and Mindfulness Instructor, Professor
I’m an empath and a sensitive woman who has learned to turn her sensitivity into her strength.
I’ve learned that it is possible to navigate the world with more confidence—not in spite of our sensitivity, but because of it.
It’s a message I’ve shared with thousands of women around the world, gently guiding them to find the courage to let go and begin again.
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There was a time when I thought strength meant holding everything in.
But life taught me something softer. Something truer.
It taught me to listen — to the body, to the breath, to the stories we tell ourselves… and the ones we’re finally ready to rewrite.
This path led me to become a certified mindfulness and meditation instructor, an NLP practitioner, and the author of Her Seven Days in Bali — a self-help novel rooted in the healing power of letting go.
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Your story is still unfolding — and it deserves to be held with compassion, not judgment.
You don’t need to silence your sensitivity to be strong.
You don’t need to wait for permission to begin again.
You are allowed to feel deeply — and still choose peace.
You are allowed to let go — and still honor what you’ve been through.
You are allowed to rewrite the story — in your voice, on your terms.
And I’m here to walk with you as you do.
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I founded Juliet Turns the Page Consultancy L.L.C. — a space where transformation is nurtured gently, mindfully, and with intention.
Through our corporate and educational mindfulness workshops, I help teams and students reconnect with clarity, presence, and emotional well-being. We talk about real things — burnout, emotional intelligence, boundaries, inner peace — and we explore practical tools that bring us back to alignment.
But long before that, I was drawn to the stories that shape us.
I hold a PhD in Literature, where my research explored the use of storytelling as a tool for healing — the way words can hold pain, make sense of loss, and create space for transformation.
My own journey through self-discovery and emotional resilience shaped not just my writing, but my work.
Because letting go isn’t giving up.
It’s choosing to meet yourself fully — and begin again.
My journey into the world of sensitivity began long before I became a coach. It started with literature — with stories that let me feel the hearts of others as if they were my own.
There was a time when I thought strength meant holding everything in.
In my TEDx talk, Reading and the Narratives of Life, I spoke about how reading teaches us empathy — how it allows us to live inside someone else’s world, even just for a page. I’ve always believed that stories aren’t just entertainment — they’re emotional education. They teach us how to feel, how to listen, how to understand.
As a highly sensitive woman myself, I’ve spent years exploring the deep connection between sensitivity, empathy, and everyday life. Literature gave me the language to name what I felt. Coaching gave me the tools to help others navigate it.
Today, my work is rooted in that same belief: that sensitivity is not something to fix — it’s something to honor. That when we learn to sit with our emotions, our stories, and our sensitivity with compassion, we don’t just heal — we transform.
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MINDFULNESS AND MEDITATION
As I delved deeper into the world of sensitivity, I came to realize how essential mindfulness and meditation are — not as ways to escape our emotions, but as ways to stay grounded within them. For highly sensitive people, the world can feel loud, fast, and overwhelming.
These practices became my anchor. I became a student of both mindfulness and meditation, not just in theory but in lived, daily practice — and that path eventually led me to become a certified mindfulness instructor.
They taught me how to hold my emotions with gentleness instead of drowning in them, how to create space between myself and what I absorb from others, and how to return — again and again — to the safety of the present moment.
And when I find myself overthinking, they remind me to meet even that with compassion, not criticism.
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Closure never comes from the one who betrays you


