Emma Hoyhtya

Speaker, Mentor, Consultant

Emma Hoyhtya is the founder of Mosaic Performing Arts, an organization built on the belief that the performing arts ecosystem can't thrive when the artists at the heart of it are struggling to make ends meet. She's been directing middle school musicals since she was in 10th grade, has spent years obsessing over the psychology of leadership and community, and has made a lifelong hobby out of making the unconscious conscious — in herself first, and then in everyone around her. Her work lives at the intersection of theater, business, and personal development, and she's deeply passionate about helping people find what she calls "the freest version of themselves." When she's not running Mosaic, she's speaking to groups about self-differentiation, everyday grief, and what it actually looks like to lead from a place of wholeness rather than hustle. If your team or community is craving something a little more honest and a little less polished, she'd love to be in the room with you.

Book a Call

The offerings

Keynote or Workshop

A keynote or workshop experience where audiences explore the three essential muscles of artistry and vocation—developing a strong sense of self, shifting from perfectionism to self-compassion, and embracing everyday grief—to unlock the most free version of themselves.


Duration and pricing available after free consultation.

One Time Consult

A focused single session to help individuals or organizations identify where these three muscles are underdeveloped in their personal or professional lives and walk away with a concrete framework for applying them.


Duration and pricing available after free consultation.

Ongoing Mentorship

An ongoing relationship dedicated to practicing and strengthening all three muscles over time, with guided support for making the unconscious conscious and building the self-awareness needed to lead, create, and connect more freely.


Duration and pricing available after free consultation.

The content

A strong "I" for a strong "we"

Learning to treat the voices, events, and emotions in your life as data to be considered through the lens of your own values as a self-differentiated individual, rather than as prescriptions that dictate your decisions.

Shifting our goal from "nothing is wrong" to "nothing needs to change"

Shifting from perfectionism and external validation toward self-compassion, by identifying your own needs and believing you are worthy of having them met.

Embracing everyday grief

Allowing yourself to continuously process and accept loss and change as a practice that ultimately enables you to embrace the chaos and evolution of life.