Remembering: Reclaiming the Forgotten

To reclaim is not to seize, but to remember.

It is a process as gentle as roots breaking through stone, as profound as awakening from a long-forgotten dream.

This restoration happens in layers—through conscious awareness, through surrender to inner knowing, and through deep states of rest where the unseen self speaks.

Like water withdrawing from toxic shores, reclamation is a quiet refusal to sustain what does not honour wholeness.

It is an act of non-violent realignment, supporting the return of the divine feminine while uplifting the masculine, bringing them into harmony once more.

Each individual is a thread in the vast fabric of consciousness.

Every act of healing shifts the collective, rippling outward in ways unseen.

To reclaim the feminine is to restore the greater balance—allowing intuition to meet logic, receptivity to meet action, and creation to flow alongside structure.

When we embody this harmony, we move beyond the constraints of culture and into the deeper rhythms of existence.

As Lao Tzu reminds us,

“When the yin and the yang are in harmony, all things flourish.”

The restoration of this harmony begins with us, in the subtle, the quiet, and the profound.