Court has been working with children since 2008, long before she knew what a feeding therapist was, and definitely before she knew she'd one day build a clinic around it.
Her clinical obsession is the relationship between neurodiversity and eating, and how it runs both ways. Eating shapes how a neurodivergent brain shows up in the world, and the way a neurodivergent brain is wired shapes how a person eats. She's seen firsthand what happens when a child goes from fewer than ten foods to more than forty. They concentrate better, they participate more fully, and the course of their life quietly changes. That's a kid who didn't have to repeat a year of school.
As someone with ADHD, fibromyalgia, and endometriosis, Court knows what it's like to navigate a healthcare system that wasn't built for you. She built Juni so families don't have to figure that out alone.
When she's not in clinic, you'll find her on a beach walk with a dog and a toddler, at the markets, or listening to Mamamia Outloud, Life Uncut, Pop Culture Parenting, Two Doting Dads or anything featuring (Queen) Maggie Dent.
Court has been working with children since 2008, long before she knew what a feeding therapist was, and definitely before she knew she'd one day build a clinic around it.
Her clinical obsession is the relationship between neurodiversity and eating, and how it runs both ways. Eating shapes how a neurodivergent brain shows up in the world, and the way a neurodivergent brain is wired shapes how a person eats. She's seen firsthand what happens when a child goes from fewer than ten foods to more than forty. They concentrate better, they participate more fully, and the course of their life quietly changes. That's a kid who didn't have to repeat a year of school.
As someone with ADHD, fibromyalgia, and endometriosis, Court knows what it's like to navigate a healthcare system that wasn't built for you. She built Juni so families don't have to figure that out alone.
When she's not in clinic, you'll find her on a beach walk with a dog and a toddler, at the markets, or listening to Mamamia Outloud, Life Uncut, Pop Culture Parenting, Two Doting Dads or anything featuring (Queen) Maggie Dent.
Ellie came to nutrition via berry-picking with her nan in the UK, a deep love of baking, and a younger sister who taught her that mealtimes can feel impossible when your brain is wired a little differently. Growing up alongside a sister with ADHD and autism, Ellie didn't read about neurodivergent eating in a textbook. She lived it from the inside.
Her clinical obsessions are the gut-brain connection and adolescent hormones, and she'll happily talk your ear off about either one. She's fascinated by how the microbiome talks to the brain, and how hormones land differently in a neurodivergent body during the tween and teen years. These threads get quietly missed in kids navigating restrictive eating, eczema, gut issues, or a cycle that derails their entire month.
As someone navigating endometriosis, Ellie knows that "you'll grow out of it" is rarely the answer, and that the signs and symptoms often start long before a diagnosis.
When she's not in clinic, you'll find her snorkelling, hunting down seashells, or baking her latest delicious creation. She dreams of one day owning a bakery and a small farm where she can feed her community in a whole different way, and she'll tell you that pineapple absolutely belongs on pizza and sparkling water tastes like TV static.
Bridgette is the reason things actually get done around here. By day she's a beauty therapist, and then she finds time to keep Juni's admin running, the inbox tidy, and Court's ADHD brain pointed in roughly the right direction. She's also Court's sister, which makes her uniquely qualified for the job and uniquely unbothered by Court's chaos.
She's the steady hand behind the scenes, booking, emailing, organising, and confirming details so the clinical team can focus on the families in front of them.
When she's not at Juni or applying a phenomenal facial (trust us, we know!), you'll find her sleeping in, on a sunny brunch date with her boyfriend, or wandering the shops at the kind of pace that requires being nowhere in particular. She fills her cup with quality time with the people she loves, and she'll happily tell you that ceviche is the perfect food.
Ask her what she's into right now and she'll tell you High Potential is unmissable, The Brothers by S.E. Hinton should be the next book you read, and ROLE MODEL deserves the top spot on your Spotify Wrapped this year.