Rosen Law Firm

Jennifer Coleman, Life Transition Coach

Jennifer Coleman

Jennifer Coleman is a Life Transition Coach at Rosen Law Firm, providing emotional support to clients in the life-altering transition of divorce. Jennifer assists clients in setting priorities and goals for post-divorce life and then ensures that those priorities remain at the forefront of the strategy employed by the legal support team. It is no accident that Rosen clients have a sense of where they are headed and that they take active steps to get there; part of Jennifer’s role is to help clients develop an Action Plan for life after divorce.

Jennifer’s prior professional experience includes not only the challenge of working with teenagers, but also counseling individuals, families, and couples. In addition to her Master of Science in Marriage and Family Counseling, Jennifer is a National Certified Counselor. Clients find that her unique blend of experience and education is a valuable asset on their Rosen Law Firm team.

Jennifer’s academic accomplishments also include her involvement in Chi Sigma Iota, a National Honor Society for students, professional counselors, and counselor educators. She recently authored a paper on multiculturalism and postmodernism in the counseling field. This commitment to further the understanding and practice of counseling is part of what makes Jennifer an excellent Life Transition Coach.

The ability and willingness to help others has never solely applied to work for Jennifer. In the community, she recruited and trained volunteers for a completely volunteer-staffed library. She taught English and provided support services to a refugee family. She also served as a hospice volunteer. This included providing emotional support to hospice clients and their caregivers and providing grief education for children. She was even willing to perform as an aardvark in a children’s puppet show. Now that’s dedication.

Like the rest of the Rosen Law Firm team, Jennifer’s resume is far more interesting than the qualifications of her profession. Most counselors haven’t traveled to every continent except Antarctica (you have to give her credit; if you’re going to skip one…) Jennifer’s travels have allowed someone from a small town in North Carolina to interact with people from varied cultures and backgrounds. She even met Nelson Mandela. But just how does travel experience in Asia, Africa, Central and South America, Australia and Europe make her a better coach? Perhaps, it explains why clients say she has such a deep connection with all of them; it is easy for her to relate to and serve a wide variety of people.