The mission

Your divinity was never theirs to define.

Reconnecting Black women to the spiritual wholeness that came before patriarchy and colonization.

Why this work

Before the world taught her to shrink, the Black woman was whole. Sovereign. Sacred. Intimately known by the Divine and unashamed of her own power.

Patriarchy and colonization didn't only take land and labor — they rewrote her relationship with God, handing her a borrowed, fearful faith in place of the intimate knowing that was always hers. The sacred was made to look like someone else, sound like someone else, belong to someone else.

My work is the returning. Decolonizing the divine is not about leaving God; it is about meeting the God who was never the colonizer's to give or take. It is the practice of coming home — to your body, your knowing, and the love that was your birthright all along.

What the work asks of us

Five movements of the return.

01

Decolonize the Divine

God was never the colonizer's to define. We unlearn the inherited, fear-based image of the sacred and reclaim a Divine that recognizes you — that looks, sounds, and loves like the woman you actually are.

02

Remember how God speaks

The Divine has always communicated through you — in intuition, dreams, the body, the land. We relearn the language colonization tried to silence and trust the voice of God moving in your own life again.

03

Return to embodiment

You are not meant to escape the body to reach the sacred. We reconnect to the spiritual embodiment the Black woman held before she was taught to fear her own flesh, pleasure, and power.

04

Heal from the inside out

With the Divine as guide, we do the inner work that performance can never reach — becoming whole rather than appearing whole, tending the wounds beneath the wounds until you are genuinely free.

05

Reclaim eternal love and fulfillment

On the other side of the return is the birthright that was always waiting: a love that does not abandon you, a fulfillment that does not depend on anyone's permission. Wholeness, for good.

Who this is for

The woman who senses there is more.

This is for the Black woman who feels the ache of a self she was never permitted to fully become — who is tired of performing a faith and a life that were handed to her. If you are ready to stop pretending and start remembering, you are already on the path. The door has always been open. This work simply helps you walk through it.

Gye Nyame — except God. Nothing else gets to define you.

Begin the return.

Join the community as it takes shape, read the book that maps the work, or begin the daily practice in the app.