Wild Remembering
Embodiment, Instinct, and the Many Ways Women Come Home to Themselves
I’m taking a short pause from releasing new podcast episodes—two, maybe three weeks—as I let a new season of my own life settle into my body. This isn’t a break from the work so much as a deepening of it. While I’m away, I wanted to offer a few curated entry points into the archive for anyone who’s newer here, or for longtime listeners who want to revisit conversations through a different lens.
This podcast was never meant to be consumed in order. There is no beginning you need to start at, no arc you need to follow. These conversations are meant to be entered the way intuition works—non-linear, responsive, alive. Trust what calls to you.
There is a remembering that happens when women stop trying to be palatable.
Not louder. Not more confident in the performative sense. But truer. Less edited. More embodied.
Across many conversations on this podcast, a shared current keeps surfacing: the moment a woman chooses to trust her inner rhythms instead of the rules she inherited.
Some of those conversations explore what it means to be untamed—not reckless, but ungoverned by expectation. Untamed as in no longer shaping yourself to be digestible. Untamed as in choosing instinct over approval. In these stories, wildness isn’t about rebellion for its own sake—it’s about honesty.
Other conversations speak to wildness as a kind of intimacy with life. The kind of wild that listens to weather, to mood, to cycles. The kind that knows when to move and when to stay still without needing justification. A remembering that aliveness has its own intelligence.
There are stories here of choosing unconventional lives. Of listening to land. Of allowing place—especially places that are raw, lush, or demanding—to initiate transformation. Living closer to the elements. Letting nature dismantle false urgency. Letting silence do its quiet work.
And woven through many of these conversations is a return to the body. To womb wisdom. To cyclical knowing. To the intelligence that lives below language and outside productivity. A remembering that the body is not something to overcome, but something to consult.
Alongside these voices are healers—too many to name, honestly—each offering a different doorway into wholeness. Not promising transcendence, but relationship. Not bypassing pain, but teaching how to listen to it without becoming it.
What all of these conversations share is not a single philosophy, but a posture:
trusting what is already alive inside you.
They remind us that embodiment is not an aesthetic. It’s a practice. One that often asks us to slow down, disappoint others, change our minds, and honor thresholds that don’t make sense on a timeline.
If you’ve felt a quiet pull toward something less structured, less performative, more honest—these episodes are not asking you to abandon your life.
They’re inviting you to inhabit it more fully.
Wildness isn’t about escape.
It’s about presence.
And remembering who you were before the world told you who to be.
If these conversations stirred something in you—if you felt a quiet recognition rather than a call to act—I invite you to stay close.
You’re welcome to become a paid subscriber if you’d like to support this work and receive essays, audio reflections, and offerings that live in this same embodied, intuitive space. There’s no pressure to move quickly or consume more than feels right.
Let this be a place you return to when something inside you says, yes, here.


“embodiment is not an aesthetic”. This feels especially true right now.