Self Reclamation: The Red Road
This journey lives at the moment of leaving the garden. It follows the Red Road as a place of choice, lineage, and wild encounter, where versions of the self begin signaling from beyond what is familiar or protected. What unfolds here is often surprising and alive. Ancestors, future selves, mythic figures, and portals appear not to be interpreted, but to be witnessed. Care is the throughline. Not rescue, not fixing, but learning what it takes to tend what has been waiting out in the holy wild.
Self Reclamation: The Door
This journey works with entry and return. A door appears into parts of the inner landscape that were overlooked rather than lost, places no one thought to visit. Nothing is hunted down. What returns does so by invitation, arriving when there is enough openness to notice and receive it.
Inner Territory Journey: Samhain
We float down a river to a doorway of connection, a place to commune with your own intuition and soul’s wisdom, choosing whether to open the door for our beloved dead to join us at a feast of remembrance and communion. We wait and see who comes to sit, what blessings or advice they might bring, bearing witness to the long story of our souls woven with the lives of so many other souls. There is an invitation to reclaim our joy, our imagination, and our wild nature around the bonfire of our souls.
Medusa
This class moves through Medusa as a living archetype shaped by violence, power, and survival. We stay with her story long enough to feel how patriarchy turns harm into myth and how those myths still move through our bodies and choices. Athena, Danaë, Perseus, and Medusa become mirrors for the ways protection, betrayal, inheritance, and awakening play out within us. The class invites responsibility without shame and imagination without bypass, opening space to rewrite what strength, guardianship, and transformation can look like now.
Self Reclamation: Tropical Forest
In this meditation we travel first through the chakra system, from the crown down. We welcome the parts of self that have been set aside. The tropical forest and shoreline hold heat, vitality, and invitation, creating a place where exiled parts can approach without pressure. Everything our parts bring is welcomed, shared, and recognized at the fire.
Uncommon Sense: A Writing Class With Jeanette LeBlanc
In this class Jeanette guides us into the tender places we’ve been circling but not naming. We write the questions behind the questions, the truths we are almost ready to admit, the love stories and heartaches still echoing in the body. Together we craft a “Dear Abby” style letter and then respond, either to our own ache or to someone else’s, practicing a steadier and more compassionate voice. This session feels like sitting at a long wooden table with women who are brave enough to tell the truth and gentle enough to answer it well. You’ll leave with prompts that keep unfolding long after the recording ends.
Cord Cutting: The Red Thread
This cord cutting works with the red thread as something inherent rather than something to earn or repair. The journey stays in the body, especially the sacral waters, and moves slowly through sensation, consent, and creative energy. Release here is not about severing connection to desire or instinct, but about loosening what has dulled or quieted the wild knowing we’re born with. The Maiden, Mother, and Crone appear as witnesses and companions, helping restore access to erotic vitality, belonging, and continuity without collapsing into shame or obligation.
Hekate With Amanda Avery
This class brings Hekate forward as a living presence who knows thresholds from the inside. We move with her through crossroads, endings, initiations, and the quiet intelligence that lives in transition. Amanda guides us along red roads that loop and intersect, showing how Hekate holds both direction and uncertainty without forcing resolution. Torches, keys, and liminal spaces appear as tools for staying oriented when life is shifting. This class meets people in moments of in-between, when clarity has not arrived yet and something older, steadier, and watchful is already walking alongside them.
Cord Cutting: The Old Forest
This cord cutting is deliberate and unhurried. It moves through old growth, following the pace of something that has been rooted for a long time. The forest holds history, attachment, and patience, allowing the connection to reveal itself rather than be hunted down. Release here comes through sovereignty and steadiness, trusting that what is ready to be severed will show itself when approached with care.