-
~ Grief is not to be conquered or completed. It's a sacred, if undesirable teacher, forcing us to become acquainted with the underworld. Tending to our grieving hearts is a daily work enabling us to stay open to life, and love. When grief is acute, letting go into the unraveling and embracing all that manifests as one's experience — cracked open and feeling fully — allows us a deeper, more liberating and more fulfilling intimacy with ourselves, and with the the Great Mystery.
-
~ For she who is harboring grief, fear, trauma, shame, or ancestral burdens in the body For she who is committed to tenderly addressing her wounds and repairing her relationship with herself. For she who knows how to breathe and is ready to go there.
~ Through deep listening, fluid, feminine movement, intuitive energy work and an oceanic collaboration with gravity, incorporating stretches and undulation which is effortless on your part, Phenomenal Touch gently facilitates profound release, physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually… opening space for energetic alchemy and cultivation of your own inner sanctum.
-
~ Coaching in reverence and alliance with your recovery
~ Support that is grounded in having walked through my own disordered eating and a destructive relationship with self (a product of unintegrated, complex grief)
~ Also available, woven in to meet your needs: therapeutic art and creative exploration, massage, somatic embodiment practices, optionally plant-assisted ceremony.
~ Soul-Full Cooking & Eating Practice & Inquiry
-
~ Ritual bodypaint/photography for thresholds/initiations/cancer patients/survivors
~ Therapeutic Art Groups for Mourning and Self-Discovery: mask making, doll-crafting, collages, and more…
-
~ Coming Soon!
“The skillful digestion of grief profoundly reminds us of our true essence and nourishes the expression of that essence with authenticity and grace. Knowledge of self and living in alignment with our true nature is key to healing and thriving…
Undigested grief, stored in the body and the mind, feeds our false stories of separation, favoring a repeated sense of aggression and accumulated residue.”
~ Amy Chadwick, ND