º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

Human Brilliance business start-up draws inspiration from founder overcoming debilitating illness

Helen Wardle is back where her career began - with a very personal focus on helping people and organisations

Gemma Wardell has launched Human Brilliance.(Image: Ascough Associates Media and Public Relations)

A woman who made her first big career move by joining the catering team at The Deep more than 20 years ago has returned to launch her own venture at the adjacent business centre.

Gemma Wardell spent five years at the award-winning aquarium and. But her new venture is a complete change of direction – inspired by years of battling the impact of debilitating illness. Human Brilliance is a coaching and training company which works with individuals and organisations to help them overcome challenges and unleash their potential.

Gemma said: “My illness started with a virus which couldn’t be pinned down easily. It developed through chronic conditions, creating more stress and anxiety because of my inability to do anything about it.

Read more:

“The first couple of years were horrendous and people were telling me I would not recover and would end up in a wheelchair. There were times when I thought that was it and things wouldn’t get any better. The whole journey to recovery was about eight to 10 years.”

Gemma’s ordeal came out of the blue and began with pain, fatigue and other physical symptoms which she was determined to overcome to live a full, early 20-year-old’s life.

She said: “Eventually I just completely crashed. I was housebound for about 18 months, I spent time in hospital and in an isolation unit well before Covid. It was thought I had a tropical disease but it was a virus that started to affect my body. Because I’m stubborn and thought I was invincible, I kept pushing and pushing in an attempt to overcome my symptoms, and was eventually diagnosed with ME.”

During her slow recovery Gemma started to study psychology and trained in neurolinguistic programming, therapeutic and health coaching, transactional analysis, counselling, and psychotherapy. Gemma is an accredited psychotherapist with a passion for organisational psychology. And as a director of a community interest company, she set up and led services which worked with the NHS, local authorities and charities to help people who had ME, chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, chronic pain and unexplained medical conditions.