User
Write something
Pinned
How to use this space
This post is here so you don’t have to work anything out for yourself. This is a free space. There’s no expectation to read everything, join everything, or respond to everything. There is no correct way to be here. Here’s how things usually show up. Weekly reflections Once a week I’ll share a short reflection. Read it when you have the capacity. If it doesn’t land, leave it. If it does, sit with it. There’s no expectation to comment. Journalling invitations Some posts include a journalling prompt. These are for you, not for the group. You don’t need to share what you write unless you genuinely want to. Meditations and journeys From time to time I’ll share short meditations or guided journeys. They’re designed to be grounding and steady, not intense. You can do them once, return to them later, or skip them entirely. Simple rituals Occasionally, there will be simple, practical rituals. Think small and doable rather than symbolic or dramatic. Live sessions From time to time there may be a live session with a clear theme. You’re welcome to come with a question or simply listen. There’s no expectation to speak or share personal material. Using the community Some people post. Some people never do. Both are fine. This isn’t a space for fixing each other or working things through in depth. It’s a place to reflect, notice, and integrate at your own pace. If you’re not sure what to do, do less. Reading quietly is a perfectly valid way to be here. There is nothing to catch up on.
1
0
How to use this space
The Goddess Brigid and Imbolc
Brigid is one of the oldest figures in Celtic spiritual life, not a distant goddess of myth, but a living presence woven into land, survival, and daily ritual. Long before she became Saint Brigid, she was honoured as keeper of the hearth fire, guardian of healing knowledge, and protector of thresholds. Her role was practical, embodied, and relational. She tended what was fragile while it became strong. Imbolc sits naturally within her domain. It marks the seasonal midpoint between winter solstice and spring equinox, a time when the earth has not yet changed on the surface, but life has already begun to stir underneath. Historically, this was a festival of tending rather than celebration, of milk and lambing, warmth and protection, quiet continuity rather than visible growth. Imbolc is an ancient Celtic festival marking the midpoint between the winter solstice and the spring equinox. It is traditionally observed on 1 February, with some observance extending into 2 February. Imbolc is associated with the first stirrings of life beneath the surface. It is a time of tending, protection, and quiet preparation rather than visible growth. In Celtic lands, this period was linked to lambing, the return of milk, and the gradual lengthening of days. The land is still wintered, but something has already begun to move. Imbolc honours early light, inner fire, and the patience required to nurture what is not yet ready to bloom.This is why Imbolc rituals were never about calling things in. They were about safeguarding what was already forming. Brigid’s fire was not a blaze, but a steady flame that stayed lit through cold months and long nights. A simple way to honour this energy is to light a single candle in the evening and sit with it for a few minutes, without intention setting or outcome seeking. Notice what in you feels tender, unfinished, or quietly alive. Ask what it needs in order to be protected over the coming weeks. Let the answer be practical rather than symbolic. Imbolc reminds us that not all spiritual work is expansive. Some of it is about staying, tending, and trusting the slow intelligence of becoming. Brigid teaches that transformation happens through care, patience, and steadiness, not force.
0
0
The Goddess Brigid and Imbolc
Imbolc & The Snow Moon
https://open.substack.com/pub/drtracyspiritualemergence/p/imbolc-the-snow-moon-and-why-this?r=38jyad&utm_medium=ios&shareImageVariant=overlay
0
0
Imbolc & The Snow Moon
Finding Calm Through Nervous System Awareness
Most stress patterns show up as everyday experiences. Feeling on edge without knowing why. Functioning well while feeling internally tense. Crashing after holding it together. Wanting to rest but finding it hard to switch off. These are not signs that something is wrong. They are signs that your nervous system has been working hard. I have shared a short slide deck here that explains, in simple language, how the nervous system responds to stress and why the body often reacts before the mind understands. It also includes a few gentle, everyday practices you can try if you want to feel a little calmer, without forcing relaxation or self-improvement. You can click the link to view the slides or download the PDF and explore it in your own time. There is no right pace and no need to do everything. Even understanding what your body has been doing can be regulating in itself. Think of this as an introduction, not a programme. A way to begin listening to your nervous system rather than pushing it. https://gamma.app/docs/The-Body-Knows-First-Nervous-System-Safety-Vagal-Tone-and-Why-Hea-im7vgoak5wpgn7p
0
0
Finding Calm Through Nervous System Awareness
Weekend Self-care
What will you do? …
0
0
Weekend Self-care
1-13 of 13
powered by
The Feminine Field
skool.com/the-feminine-field-3716
A trauma-informed feminine space blending psychology, nervous system work, and shamanic, nature-based spiritual integration.
Build your own community
Bring people together around your passion and get paid.
Powered by