Something inside you knows this wound isn’t only yours.
You have done the work. The therapy. The reading. The honest reckoning with your own patterns. And still, something remains. Something that feels older than you. Something carried.
That something has a name. It lives in your ancestral line. It lives in the patterns, wounds, and unfinished stories passed down through generations. And it is not only a burden. Woven through it is also resilience. Wisdom. Light that has survived everything.
This work is about meeting all of it and becoming the one who heals it forward.
Most people leave the call ready to explore. Come find out why.
WHAT BECOMES POSSIBLE
Clients come to me after therapy has taken them as far as it can, when they sense that what remains isn't only in their minds and bodies, it's spiritual. They are right.
When we do this work together, something shifts that the mind alone cannot reach. A father wound healed - not because he changed, but because you finally understand him across time and can set down the story that was never yours to carry.
A pattern broken not through willpower but through contact with the ancestors in their wise and well forms, who want your healing as much as you do.
You carry within you the resources and resilience to heal these wounds, for yourself and for everyone who comes after you. This work is how you answer that call.
Honoring your ancestors can begin now and can begin with you.
Start Small. Start with Intention.
Receive a Free Guide for Building an Ancestral Altar
Long before there were religions, there were ancestors. And long before there were temples or churches or sacred texts, there were small, tended places where the living paused to remember the dead.
Across every continent, in cultures that never met or exchanged ideas, human beings have been doing essentially the same thing — gathering objects, lighting flame, pouring water, speaking names. The ofrenda laden with marigolds in Mexico. The kamidana shelf receiving daily offerings in Japan. The lararium tended in ancient Roman homes. The yahrzeit candle lit in a darkened room. The hearth fire kept alive through a Celtic winter.
The forms differ. The impulse is identical.
An ancestral altar is not a religious object. It is a threshold — a dedicated place in your home where you turn your attention toward those who made your life possible. It asks nothing of you except your presence. You do not need to know your full lineage. You do not need to have had a perfect family. You do not need to have it all figured out before you begin.
A candle. A name spoken aloud. A glass of water set with intention.
This is enough to start.
The Beginner's Guide to Ancestral Practice walks you through everything — the history of this practice across world traditions, what to place on your altar and why, how to tend it, and simple words for the first time you light the flame.
It is free. And it is waiting for you.
Have a Question?
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