We believe in
Devotion.
Discernment.
Alchemy.
Justice.
Beauty.
Liberation.
Thresholds
Crossroads.
Sovereignty.
Refusal.
Repair.
Reverence.
Radiance.
Renewal.
Consent.
This is the line we hold,
and the way we walk.
We believe the sacred lives at the crossroads, where power meets responsibility and choice has consequence.
We believe beauty is a compass in both the light and the dark. Not decoration or escape, but a way of orienting toward truth, dignity, and what deserves care.
We believe women, queer, and trans people are keepers of wisdom forged through survival, discernment, and devotion, and that their voices must be centered, protected, and believed.
We believe racism is malignant. It is a spiritual illness that deforms systems, distorts relationships, and demands to be named and dismantled, not spiritually reframed or politely ignored.
We believe patriarchy is a spiritual distortion, not a neutral structure, and that any spirituality unwilling to name harm is complicit in it.
We believe alchemy over power. Transformation over domination. Repair over control. We reject hierarchies that hoard authority and call it holiness.
We believe justice is not separate from devotion. Feeding the hungry, protecting the vulnerable, redistributing resources, and refusing domination are sacred acts.
We believe boundaries are holy. Refusal is a form of love. Endings matter as much as beginnings.
We believe the body is not an obstacle to the sacred, but her first altar.
We believe true guidance does not command or coerce. It illuminates the path, guards the threshold, and trusts people to walk forward in their own authority.
We believe death is not the enemy. Cruelty is. We trust the holiness of endings, and we refuse to worship suffering.
We believe in tending thresholds: between months and moments, grief and becoming, what must be released and what is ready to arrive.
How we practice this -
- We gather monthly at the dark moon to release, repair, and renew.
- We practice spiritual care that includes body, finances, home, and relationships.
- We give offerings that become material care: mutual aid, meals, redistribution.
- We name harm plainly (racism, patriarchy) and refuse spiritual bypassing.
- We honor beauty as devotion: in language, ritual, and the way we treat people.
What you can expect here-
- Consent and boundaries are honored.
- No hierarchy games. No coercion.
- Privacy and dignity are protected.
- You won’t be asked to debate your humanity.
- Community over spectacle.
