The February 11th circle is FULL! Join the waitlist to get notified if space opens up and receive emails about upcoming circles.
Join us in reclaiming the fullness of our feminine magic and power as we weave together in re-membrance of our connection to the natural world.
Each time we meet, we’ll begin by communing with a plant ally, often prepared as a tea, sitting quietly in meditative ritual space. Opening this direct line of communication is one of the best ways to learn herbalism and rekindle our ancestral connection to the plants and the earth herself. All plants have a spirit, and most are willing to communicate with us if we are willing to listen!
We’ll continue with a brief exploration of the traditional uses, energetics and biochemistry of the plant we’re communing with, followed by a sharing circle supported by the spirit medicine of the plant. We’ll focus our discussion around topics in the realms of healing ancestral and cultural wounds, resacralizing feminine rites of passage, the intersection of entheogens and the feminine, reclaiming earth-based knowledge and embodying leadership rooted in interconnection.
Our February circle will include discussion around healing the sister wound and will be supported by the plant spirit medicine of spicebush (Lindera benzoin).
As the sap begins to rise in the trees and shrubs in late winter, it delivers water, nutrients and sugar to new leaf buds as they swell in readiness for spring. This can be an ideal time to harvest and work with bark and twig medicines. Aromatic spicebush twigs are traditionally used in Cherokee and Appalachian folk medicine to make warming, stimulating spring tonics.
Join us as we co-create a healing container for sharing, learning and empowering each other with the deep medicine of sisterhood and the plants!
Offered by donation, $15-30 suggested, non-monetary forms of reciprocity also welcome. Space is limited. Please RSVP to save your spot!
These circles are open to all women—cis, trans & femme folk.
***While many of the plants we'll be working with are mildly psychoactive, we do not plan to work with plants classified as psychedelics in these circles.***
Questions? On the fence? Please reach out!
Women and the plant queendom have always been interwoven.
Our ancient female ancestors were deeply connected to the landscape, natural rhythms and plant kin that surrounded them. They were the wise women, gathering and growing medicinal herbs, learning the secrets of their use for health and healing, and collectively maintaining this knowledge for their families and communities. We can thank our lineage of wise women for the simple fact that we are alive! Their knowledge and resourcefulness in using plants to nourish, heal and protect enabled generations of childbirth and survival.
As colonialism spread throughout the world, much of this ancestral knowledge was erased, suppressed and/or exploited. In some places, the women who spoke to the plants, made medicines and gathered with other women in community to share their wisdom—the herbalists, midwives, medicine women and witches—were persecuted in horrific and violent ways. And their sisters, mothers, daughters and friends lived with the fear that they would be next, so they stopped gathering openly.
Women’s ways of knowing, healing and leading were devalued and largely replaced by a patriarchal system built on scarcity, competition and commodification of knowledge.
All of this trauma, fear, numbness and alienation from nature has reverberated through our bodies and wombs for generations, and it shows up today as ancestral wounding that disconnects us from our magic and power. For many women, this trauma shows up as the “witch wound” that keeps us scared from being too visible and the “sister wound”—the conditioning that tells us other women are competition, dangerous and not to be trusted. The sister wound often manifests as insecurity, judgment, comparison, jealousy and fear in relationship to other women. It keeps us disempowered, separated and fighting each other, instead of fighting the larger system of inequality and oppression.
Coming together with other women in circle and communing with the plants are simple, yet powerful ways to heal the wounds of separation and reclaim what has been stolen and forgotten.
Together, we will re-member the ancient ways of relating to each other, to the plants and to all creation.
We’ll re-member how to speak to the plants—our plantcestors—and receive their wisdom, which often comes both through the spirit realm and through the physical effects their biochemical constituent have on our bodies and minds.
The plants know how to nourish and heal. They also know how to adapt to change, how to live in harmony with the forces of nature, and how to reweave us back into interconnection with the love and wisdom of our ancestors.