Last issue, Alice shared her story of transformation.
Now, in part two, we explore her Wild Women Retreats, sanctuaries where women return to their truth, their rhythms, and each other.
Alice May Redmond’s Wild Women Retreats invite women into a profound homecoming to themselves.
Inspired by Clarissa Pinkola Estés, Alice believes the psyche thrives in cycles of rest and creation, yet modern life rarely allows this.
Her retreats carve out that space, offering sanctuary from noise and expectation so women can reconnect with who they truly are.
Her intention is simple: to help women receive.
Participants are guided through breathwork, archetype embodiment, energy work, art therapy, yogic practices, and rituals in nature.
Yet time and again, the deepest healing comes from sisterhood.
“We go so long without true community,” Alice reflects, “and yet this is what we crave most.”
Alice calls her approach a “treasure chest of tools,” gathered from years of global travel and learning.
She blends ancient traditions and modern techniques, never prescribing, only offering what has transformed her own life.
The retreat setting itself becomes a portal, nurturing stillness and presence that daily life seldom allows.
Location matters deeply.
From Mexico to Mallorca and Byron Bay, each site is chosen for its sacred energy, silence, and beauty.
Alongside this remoteness, Alice insists on grounded luxury, where every detail nourishes the senses.
“At the heart of her work is feminine energy and archetypes: the Wise Woman who seeks rest and guidance, the Wild Woman reclaiming primal fire, the Goddess who softens into receptivity, and the Mother who nurtures and allows herself to be nurtured.”
These explorations awaken profound shifts, restoring women to their natural rhythms.
For Alice, the greatest joy is witnessing each woman’s unravelling, remembering, and the sisterhood that lasts long after the retreat ends.
“We’re all just walking each other home,” she says.
Ultimately, while online work has its power, Alice believes nothing compares to the embodied experience of a retreat.
To step away, embrace the unknown, and be witnessed by strangers who become soul family is a rare and transformative kind of magic.
Alice May Redmond
alicemayredmond.com

