Our story

We built the studio we wished existed when life felt loud.

Reverie Field began with a simple frustration: wellbeing help was either too clinical or too chaotic, and almost never accessible. So we made something paper-quiet instead.

We are a small studio in Portland, Oregon working with people who are navigating two things at once: their inner weather, and the practical maze of accessible living.

That overlap matters. The person learning to journal through anxiety is often the same person trying to understand a disability card, an eligibility letter, or a benefit appeal. We refuse to treat those as separate worlds. Emotional growth and accessible living belong in the same calm room, and that is the room we keep.

Our work is restorative rather than clinical. We are not a crisis service and we do not pretend to be. What we offer is steadier ground: reflective practices drawn from research, journaling that builds self-awareness, mindfulness paced for a busy life, and patient, plain-language help with the paperwork that so often stands between people and their rights.

And because the people we serve include assistive-technology users, accessibility is not an afterthought here. It shapes how we write, how we meet, and how every page of this site is built.

What we hold to

Four quiet commitments.

Restorative, not clinical

We are a calm room, not a waiting room. The language stays warm and the pace stays kind.

Accessible by default

WCAG AA contrast, keyboard paths, and screen-reader landmarks are the floor, not a feature.

We listen first

Before any plan, there is a conversation. Your story sets the direction, every time.

Show the sources

We link openly to the research and partners behind our guidance, so trust is earned, not assumed.

The people

A small team, fully present.

No call centre, no churn. The person you meet first is the person who stays with you.

Rosalind Achebe

Founder · Lead facilitator

Spent a decade in community mental-health work before opening the studio. Believes the bravest thing most people do is keep a steady morning.

Tomas Briar

Benefits navigator

A former case-worker who reads eligibility rules so you do not have to. Turns dense agency language into a single clear next step.

Noor Eklund

Journaling guide

Poet and circle facilitator. Holds the writing groups with a light hand and a long memory for what each person is working toward.

Come as you are

Curious whether this is a fit?

The first conversation is just that, a conversation. Tell us a little about your situation and we will write back with a calm, honest read.