Standing at the precipice of purpose: Season 1 finale
If you are craving a deeper sense of purpose in your life, if you feel like you’re on a never-ending hunt for the ideal job or career or business and you just don’t seem to be making progress, or if maybe you used to have something that lit you up and it just doesn’t anymore—this episode was made for you.
We’ve reached the end of season one. And it feels very timely to begin this episode with just a simple idea to contemplate: For every beginning, there is also an ending.
We cannot begin something new without ending something old. That applies to New Years. That applies to projects. And it applies to us as human beings. If we want to step into a new chapter, a new version of ourselves, then something about us needs to end.
This is where the death card can scare a lot of people in the tarot. When we see it, it’s like, “Oh no, that’s terrible.” But we forget that through the death of things comes new life. And what we’re about to do by ending this season of the podcast and preparing for the new one is we’ve got this opportunity to let go, to allow some things to die that are ready to die, because a new version of you is ready to be born.
Prefer to listen? Catch the full conversation here:
The Cliff’s Notes
Core Themes:
- Purpose is not a fixed destination at the top of a mountain—the treasure is found inside the mountain (inside you)
- We cannot begin something new without ending something old; growth requires letting go
- Purpose is a verb, not a noun—it’s felt, experienced, embodied, and chosen in the present moment
- Your purpose sphere’s shadow acts as a gatekeeper to discovering your true calling
- The parts of you that have been rejected or starved are quite possibly what is most needed by the world
Key Takeaways:
- Purpose doesn’t come from job titles: We can be in our purpose while in various roles, but purpose itself is not found in labels or external validation.
- The chase never ends if you’re climbing the wrong mountain: Achieving your “dream” goal often reveals it wasn’t what you were actually seeking.
- Your shadow is your gatekeeper: The shadow of your purpose sphere (in Gene Keys) reveals the pattern that’s blocking you from your calling.
- What you’re starving for is what you’re meant to give: The deepest gift you could imagine giving to others is often connected to what you most craved but didn’t receive.
- Joy and purpose go hand in hand: The thing that brings you the most joy and makes you most vibrant is where you’ll find the most abundance and impact.
Want a personalized Mythic Map of your own hero’s journey? That’s why I created Mythic Journey.
Your Gene Keys profile reimagined as a literal map that will reveal your most challenging internal obstacles to overcome, protective patterns to disrupt, and the gifts that are waiting for you on the other side. Over the course of 75+ minutes (in a pre-recorded video you can watch over and over again), I’ll operate as your very own guide as we weave the new narrative for what you’re being called to and how to step into your full potential.
Intrigued and want to know more? Click here for all the deets!
The Elephant in the Room: The Never-Ending Chase
For many of us, we spend a lot of our lives hustling, chasing, on this quest that feels very intentional. We always have this sense of purpose in terms of “I have to keep going. I have to keep going.”
We’ve got this destination that we believe we’re trying to reach. And often it involves, “Okay, once I have A, B, and C—once I have earned this much money, I’ve been able to buy the house, I’ve been able to settle down”—maybe for you it involves kids or not kids, maybe it’s pets, maybe it’s something else, maybe it’s a garden.
There are things that you want to be able to accomplish, and you feel like once you accomplish them, you’re going to be able to breathe. You’re going to finally be able to enjoy your life.
The Wake-Up Call
And for many of us—not everyone, some people will keep doing this until the very, very end—but for others of us, we have a wake-up call at some point.
It can happen at very different points. It can also happen at multiple points. There was a version of this in late twenties, maybe around thirty, and then also going through another one at the moment. But then there have been clients where it’s happened in their forties, fifties, and sixties.
Where they go, “Oh wow, I see that I have been on this chase. I’ve been hunting something.”
Remember that early episode where the Hunter was talked about? Where we’ve been really specific about this chase and then you realize something’s not working. “I’m not reaching that destination. Life is passing me by and I’m already exhausted. How the hell am I going to make it? How am I going to get there?”
And we’ve been through the dark forest. We’ve realized how many of these different monsters kept us distracted, going around in circles, looking for the wrong thing or going about it in the wrong way.
And we’re like, “I can’t keep doing this.”
Often it’s this “I’m sick of doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result” that leads people to working together, because they’re just like, “Well, nothing in the past has worked. But I’m also out of ideas. I know I can’t keep signing up for another course. I’ve read all of the self-improvement books. I’m exhausted trying to improve myself. What now?”
The Grief of Realizing
And it can be quite a challenging period to go through where we realize, “Wow, I’ve poured years and years and years into going about my life a certain way, and it didn’t get me any closer to what I wanted.”
And there’s often a period of grieving that we have to go through and even self-forgiveness to go, “Okay, look, I did the best with what I had at the time. I’ve always done my best. I forgive myself for what I didn’t know and I need to now accept that I’m here today and I have free will and whatever happens next, it’s up to me. But I’m not going to keep going about it the way I used to.”
The Mountain: A Different Kind of Quest
So this is really the premise of this entire episode: reassessing how we’re going about what we’re looking for.
A really beautiful symbol is the mountain.
So often we approach our lives as—or maybe we see our life as one giant mountain to climb—but what we often do is like a mountain range that we give ourselves. And it’s like every time we scale one mountain, we just find the next mountain that we want to scale.
And so that means that we’re often standing at the foot of a mountain, looking up at the top and going, “Oh, here we go again.”
And immediately that taps us into this energy of struggle, of force, of exhaustion, and of there being a really fixed destination that we need to reach.
The Problem with Mountain Climbing
But the problem is—and this has been lived firsthand—achieving the ultimate dream, what was thought was the ultimate dream back in early twenties when getting into the first mainstage musical, that was the mountain that was wanted to be scaled. Very specific. Nothing was going to stop the climb. And the climb happened and it felt great to climb it, to do that and to check that off.
But once at the top, that was when the real upset kicked in because the thought was, “Hang on, this is not what I thought it was going to be. Where is the peace that I thought I was going to feel? Where is this ongoing sense of stability and accomplishment? Where’s the sense of identity I thought it was going to give me?”
All of the things that were thought would come with achieving this really big deal goal—they didn’t come.
In fact, what was gotten instead was a whole bunch of other challenges. New level, new devil. Met with all sorts of new challenges and still hadn’t found the things that were being looked for that were thought would be gotten when achieving this goal.
The Real Journey Begins
So that happened really early on and was quite a wake-up call. And it wasn’t until a few years later working with a first coach that there was really starting to look elsewhere for what was being craved.
And that began a very, very long personal development journey, one that is going to be unending. There’s knowing it will always be on this journey.
However, it changed the journey completely because there was realizing that what was being searched for could not be found at the top of a mountain.
Even though as a human being, there was never going to be giving up wanting to climb mountains—that is built into us. We love a challenge. Humans actually love, believe it or not, part of us loves the struggle. It gives us a sense of purpose.
But often we get so caught up in the struggle and the temporary sense of purpose it gives us.
Think about that sense of accomplishment where you’ve checked off your to-do list for the day. How good that feels. And yet, it doesn’t matter what was on the to-do list. It could have been really kind of meaningless, menial busywork tasks that we checked off the list.
Same as the chase for Inbox Zero. We do it. And yet has it actually changed anything in our lives? Maybe there’s a tiny bit less mental load that’s being created. Maybe we’re a tiny bit less anxious. But for the most part, the rest of our lives look exactly the same and we feel the same about ourselves.
It’s not like you walk around going, “Oh yes, look at me. I’m so on purpose because I maintain Inbox Zero.”
No. It’s kind of a minor detail. And there are plenty of people who have a lot more peace and sense of purpose than you likely do, and they have an insanely chaotic inbox.
It’s not a clue that we’re closer to what we’re chasing.
The Treasure Inside the Mountain
So this brings back to the point about how the search, the quest, changed once realizing it was not a fixed destination. And it had nothing to do with how many boxes were being checked, what the inbox looked like.
The mountain exists for a reason. It does represent our journey as human beings. But what we forget is that the treasure is found inside the mountain.
Now, maybe you’re into fantasy books like Lord of the Rings. We can also find dragons inside the mountain. But you know what? The dragon is guarding the treasure.
So whether you see it as the hall that is full of gold coins and crowns and things, or you see it as the natural treasure that the earth creates—gold, gems, crystals—the top of the mountain and the view from up there is incredible.
But so is what we will find inside the mountain.
Not Giving Up the Climb
And so it’s not about giving up on being mountain climbers or anything like that. It’s seeing the mountain as a different kind of quest.
It’s realizing that we can use the top of the mountain and the view from up there as part of our vision for life. And it gives us a sense of knowing where we want to go next. It gives us some structure and direction. It’s a wonderful thing.
But we need to understand that we will never find that thing that we’re looking for at the top of the mountain, because that thing that we’re looking for is related to this entire mythic journey that we’re going on or that we’ve been talking about so far.
It’s this quest for us to actually uncover our true purpose in life, to be able to live a life where we feel so fulfilled, so authentically expressed, so attached to this idea that “I have meaning. I have a sense of purpose. I know my place in this world.”
And the things that we find on top of the mountain are things like job titles, things like roles that we give ourselves. Whether it’s the role of mother and father, whether it’s the role of girlfriend, husband, wife, whether it’s being the managing director or being self-employed or a personal branding coach—whatever those things are, are all based on labels and our purpose is not actually found within them.
We can be in our purpose while we’re in one of those roles. But what we realize when we go on this inward journey is that purpose is a verb.
Purpose Is a Verb, Not a Noun
Purpose does not come from a job title. Purpose is felt, experienced, embodied. Purpose is actually a choice.
We can connect to our purpose in any moment—literally while we’re unemployed, while we’re doing a job that we don’t actually enjoy, or while we’re doing what we think is our dream job.
It is actually a choice that we have, a present-moment choice.
Now, does that mean we just give up on trying to find the ideal role for us, that we give up on looking for the best possible relationships? Of course not.
But the point is that—this comes back to the be-do-have versus the have-do-be—the world has told us that when we find the right job, we will find our purpose within it, as opposed to telling us that the truth is: we are here to find our purpose and then the ideal role will follow.
And it will also likely change.
You Will Outgrow Roles
Because this is the thing: as long as we are on this journey intentionally—this mythic journey where we keep going deeper and deeper into our authentic expression and removing everything that’s holding us back from living authentically—we’re going to keep growing and evolving, which means we will likely outgrow a role that felt right for us once.
A few years could pass and we’re like, “Oof, this no longer fills me up. This no longer feels authentic to me. I now feel constricted where I used to feel a lot of freedom.”
And this is what brings us back to the journey again. This is why this is a cyclical thing. You will receive the call over and over again.
Because the more you grow and evolve, the more you will change shape, the clearer you become on what your true purpose is, the more ways you discover that you’re able to express yourself.
Things that used to feel completely out of reach will then just become normal to you.
A Client Example
For instance, one client who could not even imagine, had an absolute terror of getting on camera and had all sorts of mental blocks about expressing herself this way, now is someone who shows up on camera, on video, on a regular basis—every single week—and it now just feels like a normal occurrence, like an everyday thing.
But it used to feel like a mountain that she actually needed to climb. And that is just reflecting how far her personal growth has come.
We can often look at someone who is incredible on camera, who seems to just be so confident presenting in public and just has this energy of someone who’s confident and ready to take the world by storm, and think, “Wow, clearly that is their gift. They were born with that.”
And then you find out: Nope. That person was actually naturally introverted, was scared of camera or public speaking at some point. And when they first started doing it, were actually kind of awkward and not particularly great at it. Not particularly magnetic.
And yet what they’ve done is they’ve stuck with that and they’ve developed this level of mastery. And in the process of developing that mastery, they also became a new person altogether—a person for whom it is their norm to express themselves this way and to be so visible.
What Are You Really Chasing?
So the point being made in a roundabout way is that whatever you’re chasing, know that there is something underneath what you’re chasing that is not what it appears on the surface.
And this is a really important thing for us to explore, particularly when it comes to purpose.
There is some part of you that is wanting to be expressed, that wants to be a part of your everyday life.
Often when we’re looking for a new role, when we’re looking for somewhere to belong in the world, the way that we’re going to find what we’re looking for is first discovering what is that thing inside you that wants to be expressed, then we’re going to be able to figure out where to place it in the world.
Your Purpose Sphere: The Compass
The point in all of this is we are now at the location on the map that is about your purpose.
This is literally your Purpose Sphere in the Gene Keys and on your mythic map.
This relates to—we actually contemplate this through two lenses, as we do in the Gene Keys as well. So the first is through the general lens of your purpose. And the symbol used is the compass because once we connect to the true gift that is connected to this particular Gene Key sphere, it starts to give us this sense of direction.
And it becomes really obvious when we are getting closer to our purpose or when we’re denying it in ourselves.
But then what we do is once we cross that threshold into the underworld, we then contemplate it through the lens of the mirror. And what we start doing with everything in the underworld actually is we’re contemplating a lot of our shadows through the lens of relationship, because this is the most powerful mirror that we actually have.
Everything that we’re in relationship with—and that can be people as well as situations—is always reflecting back to us where we’re at in the journey.
Your Shadow as Gatekeeper
Just know that whatever happens beyond this, this journey that we’re going on, this thing that you’re actually craving—this sense of purpose—is something that we are going to discover within the mountain, within you, because it was built into you from the beginning.
You actually have a blueprint that already says what your purpose is. And we cut ourselves off from being able to find it as long as we are too attached to any specific destination, to thinking that our purpose has only one shape that it can take.
The shadow of your purpose sphere can be seen as a gatekeeper to your purpose.
The purpose sphere itself is this entire story in itself. But the way it’s being seen is that this threshold point is going to reveal so much around purpose, how we’re meant to be operating in the world.
But then what’s going to happen is every stop along the way through the underworld, as we integrate these shadows, we’re going to uncover more gifts and more clues as to how we’re supposed to be moving about the world. (And saying “supposed to,” meaning the way that it’s going to bring us the most joy, that’s going to feel the most natural and the most fulfilling.)
A Personal Example: Gene Key 39
An example: the Gene Key in this placement is Gene Key 39. The shadow of it is the shadow of provocation.
And provocation is about being provoked—a.k.a. triggered—and being someone who provokes others.
Now here’s how it operated as a gatekeeper. (This is being given so that if you want to go away and look at your own Gene Keys chart, you can then do your own contemplation, see if you can kind of come up with your own story for how your shadow is your gatekeeper of this particular threshold.)
The first lesson that really had to be learned was about not allowing others to provoke. As in realizing—because the siddhi, the highest expression of this Gene Key is liberation—so that gives you a clue. If you’re being provoked, you are not free.
So firstly there had to be learning how to handle other people and the fact that there was allowing own energy, own emotions to be manipulated by other people. Being so easily provokable or triggerable kept trapped.
So that was kind of phase one, which was a big phase and it’s an ongoing thing as well.
But what being meant by that is, allowing someone else’s mood to throw completely off course and go, “Oh, well, if they’re not in a good mood, then I can’t be in a good mood. I can’t go about my plans. I’m gonna have to drop what I’m doing and try and put them in a better mood,” because it felt like as long as they were grumpy or stressed, it was going to affect energy and good work couldn’t be done.
But that was just being a victim of other people’s emotions.
But the bigger one, the bigger gatekeeper really was the fear of provoking other people. The fear of saying something that might upset someone.
And think about this—working as a coach, so actually here to help people get out of their own way, here to help people take action. The biggest thing is wanting what is best for somebody else.
Now, if being scared of saying something that upsets them, potentially scared of speaking the truth, speaking what is being observed in their behavior—avoiding telling them that there’s observing what’s believed is an unhealthy pattern that’s getting in the way of them taking the action that they want to take—how in the world is actually going to be the best possible coach?
If being scared of upsetting someone, if being scared of provoking someone?
And so the mission was to just be nice, to be seen always as nice and to be liked by everyone.
And there’s also a five line here because it’s a three-five profile, and the five line is about leadership and power and impact and using the voice.
So could already see—now just looking at this one sphere—actually here to use the voice to wake people up. As in, actually meant to provoke people.
But the way to get out of the shadow is connecting to the heart and knowing that whatever is being shared, it’s from a place of love. It’s because of loving someone and wanting the absolute best for them that sometimes things will be said that are known may be upsetting in the short term.
The Defining Moment
One of the most intense situations of the entire professional life where there had been working long term, kind of on and off with a client—and this wasn’t just a favorite client, this person had become a good friend and was one of the earliest clients as well—and working with them in a more hands-on role, which was experimental.
Had been working with them for about nine or so months and had started to really spot some things where it was like, “Hang on. Me being in this role does not feel like it’s in the highest good, because it’s allowing them to not take full responsibility for their own business.”
Could see that there was a fear that they had of taking responsibility for certain areas of the business. They didn’t trust themselves, they didn’t trust their skills and their knowledge, and they were like, “It’s better to just get Cat to do it and to be my brain than for me to need to face this because I’m not good.”
And at first it felt like, “Yeah, absolutely. I can do this for you. Borrow my brain.”
And then over time it just became more and more uncomfortable where it was starting to really stress out because there was knowing that a business owner needs to have full responsibility for their business. Obviously, yes, then we build a team and they’re going to take on certain responsibilities, but the buck stops with the business owner.
And it was like, “If me being here is stopping them from taking this responsibility and for making some tough calls, I’m just kind of providing a Band-Aid fix—this does not feel good at all.”
This was accounting for a huge percentage of revenue at the time because it was a really big commitment. And just reached this point of: “I can’t hold it in anymore. I can’t just—even though I’d been hired to do a specific thing and saying anything is kind of outside of the scope of what I’ve been hired for—I love this person too much to allow this to continue. I need to share with them the truth as I see it.”
And so a letter was written laying everything out, passing on a huge amount of thoughts and perspectives.
And it—let’s just say it could have been handled in a slightly better way. It was high impact because it was unexpected.
But the point was that once they’d gotten over the shock of receiving this, they came back within a couple of days after having time to digest, and they were like, “You have given me a gift.” And they thanked for the honesty.
And there was crying and crying and crying because there were so many emotions, because this was also a friendship.
The point was, there was actually ending up basically talking out of the job. Kind of getting fired because there was telling her, “I shouldn’t be doing this role as long as someone else isn’t doing a different role. There needs to be some other things in place in order for you to justify paying me to do these things. And I don’t feel right continuing.”
And so basically, yeah, was the one that outed and ended up not continuing on. And it was upsetting and scary and one of the most tumultuous little periods of life.
And yet it unlocked something. It unlocked this truth-telling ability that then had this ripple effect.
Then started seeing more opportunities, for instance, with clients where used to be the person who would just do the thing that you’re taught as a coach, which is just ask questions and then ask what they think is the right thing to do and then support them.
And the realization was: “There is some BS here. This can’t be right. It can’t be just a matter of asking questions. Because if I see that my clients are stuck in a damaging pattern, I have this ability to pattern-disrupt and to call them on something and to help them see their life through a new lens.”
And so started having some more tough love conversations with clients where there wouldn’t be just letting them get away with avoiding questions and going in circles, and really starting to ask more provocative questions and poking fun—always said with love, but really going, “Okay, what are you really avoiding here?”
And sure enough, breakthroughs started happening a lot faster with clients.
The Mission Revealed
The mission became about: “Okay, how can I help them get to the truth as quickly as possible and to achieve their vision in the most efficient way possible? Help them realize that what they’re chasing is a felt experience, is a frequency, and it does not have to take the shape that they were potentially attached to.”
Because often the shape they became attached to had to do with something that they discovered in the dark forest—had to do with them comparing themselves to somebody else, looking at some other influencer or successful person and how they do things. And they thought, “Oh, well, I want to have what they have. So therefore I need to do things this way.”
And the approach has always been inside-out where it’s like, “Let’s actually get clear on what you want to experience in your life. How do you want to feel? How do you want to express yourself? And then I’ll be the person who helps you find a way forward that is completely built around who you are.”
Purpose Is Not a Fixed Destination
And this just brings us back to this point of purpose.
When we can really get a deeper understanding of what it is that we’re craving, what it is that we really want to express, we then go about our lives in a very different way.
We stop chasing a specific job title or business model, and we realize that we can find the thing we’re looking for in lots of different forms. And therefore we can surrender a little bit more to life and trust that life is going to bring us exactly what is best for us, and we don’t have to try and control it so much.
Again, this is a throwback to the idea of the Hunter and how life can become a lot freer and more joyful, and just easier in general, when we’re not so attached to exactly how our life is supposed to look and realize everything that we’re chasing has to do with how we want to feel.
Activation & Contemplation
We’ve planted a seed here, and there’s wanting you to have that contemplation.
Have a look at your Gene Keys profile and have a look at the shadow keynote for your purpose sphere. So where the example is provocation, what is yours?
And how might that be a gatekeeper to your uncovering your true purpose?
And then know that we’re going to take this deeper. In season two, we’re actually going to go into the underworld, and we’re going to start uncovering all these other parts of you that have been denied, that have been locked away. Because, as mentioned, in that shadow are your greatest strengths.
Your Archetype to Activate: The Orphan
So the final contemplation now is your archetype and a couple of symbols to just get your subconscious bringing a little bit more to your awareness right now.
The archetype is that of the orphan, which sounds a little sad and like, “What? What does this have to do with my purpose?”
Well, the questions that connect to the orphan—because the orphan represents the rejected in us, the part of us that we actually abandoned. It’s not about you as a whole human being being abandoned and rejected, although that could be it as well.
There may be things that you can uncover around that. Times that you were rejected and what that led you to doing to try and avoid that rejection happening again.
But we’ll go into that in much more depth in season two.
But the questions here are:
- What are you starving for?
- What have you actually not been fed?
- What parts of you have been locked away and starved?
And while we can think that the only way to heal the orphan is to give it what it needs, often the most powerful thing we can do for healing is to actually give to others what we were never able to receive.
And obviously there’s a line to draw. This is not about self-abandonment again—probably something that’ll come up in season two.
Your Questions
But the question for you right now is: What is the deepest gift that you could imagine giving to others?
And if that’s really hard to contemplate through that lens, first think: What’s the most incredible thing you could imagine someone giving to you?
And I don’t mean something material. I mean the gift of their attention or love. What is the kind of support that you have most often craved?
And can you imagine giving that to others?
There is a little line from the archetype card deck that says: “What has been rejected is quite possibly what is most needed.”
And this is something that will kind of close this loop towards the end of season two, where one of the final destinations in season two will be the cave. And the cave represents our inner fire—the deepest, darkest part of us that often represents a part of us that was alive and well when we were brought into this world.
And at some point early in childhood, some of our most innocent desires and vision and dreams were locked away because we were told they were silly, they weren’t practical. Maybe we were laughed at, maybe we were rejected, or it was just like, “Oh, it’s not realistic. This is what you have to shut away in order to survive in this world.”
But whatever part of you has been rejected often is what is most needed by the world, and it is what you most need to express, because it’s what is giving you this sense of lack of purpose.
The Medallion & The Nectar: Two Sides of Identity
Two powerful symbols emerged as I closed out this contemplation: the medallion and the nectar. Together, they represent what we must release and what we must reclaim.
The Medallion: What We’ve Been Carrying
The medallion represents external validation, labels, and inherited values. It’s the family crest, the job title, the personality descriptor you’ve worn like armor. These are the things the world has told you matter—the categories you’ve been sorted into, the roles you’ve been assigned.
Take a moment to list all the labels you currently carry. Who are you supposed to be in your friendships? What professional identities do you cling to? Which values did you inherit from your family, your upbringing, your past? Write them all down.
Now ask yourself: which of these no longer fit? Which did you take on because you thought you had to, not because they felt true? As we close one chapter and open another, some of these medallions are ready to be released.
The Nectar: What Gives You Life
But here’s what’s crucial—we don’t replace old labels with new ones. That’s just swapping one external identifier for another.
Instead, we return to what actually gives us life. Nectar is medicine. It’s the thing that restores your life force when you’re depleted. It’s the activities that once brought you pure joy, the moments when you were most yourself—unfiltered, silly, fully alive.
What used to light you up before you started this phase of adult life? What parts of yourself have been locked away, deemed too impractical or unprofessional? These aren’t distractions from your purpose—they’re clues to it.
The universe wants you to feel joy. Purpose and joy aren’t separate pursuits; they’re intimately connected. The more you lean into what lights you up, the more you become a lighthouse for others. Despite what you’ve been told about work being a slog, about being practical and putting aside your dreams—the thing that brings you the most joy might actually be where you attract the most abundance.
What if those passion projects and hobbies aren’t meant to stay hidden? What if the “unprofessional” parts of yourself are actually the key to your next level of purpose and prosperity?
Stepping Into the Underworld
We’ve reached the threshold. Season one has taken us through the ordinary world—recognizing the call, facing the monsters in the dark forest, and beginning to understand that what we’re searching for isn’t at the top of the mountain. It’s inside it.
Season two is where we descend into the underworld, into the depths of the mountain itself. This is where the real treasure lives—not in external achievements or job titles, but in the gifts that have been hiding in your shadows, waiting to be claimed.
We’ll be exploring your purpose sphere through a new lens: the mirror of relationship. Every connection in your life reflects back where you are on the journey. We’ll face a series of tests and ordeals designed to help you integrate your shadows and transform them into gifts. Each stop along the way will reveal more about how you’re meant to move through the world, what brings you the most joy, and what feels most natural and fulfilling.
This inward journey isn’t about adding more to who you are. It’s about uncovering what’s already there, what’s been waiting in the dark for you to finally see it.
If season one has resonated with you, if you’ve found yourself nodding along or feeling that pull toward something deeper, I’d love to hear from you. Leave a review, send me a message, or share episode one with someone you know who’s being called to something new.
The descent begins soon. I’ll see you in the underworld.
Want a personalized Mythic Map of your own hero’s journey? That’s why I created Mythic Journey.
Your Gene Keys profile reimagined as a literal map that will reveal your most challenging internal obstacles to overcome, protective patterns to disrupt, and the gifts that are waiting for you on the other side. Over the course of 90(ish) minutes – in a pre-recorded video you can watch over and over again – I’ll operate as your very own guide as we weave the new narrative for what you’re being called to and how to step into your full potential.
Intrigued and want to know more? Click here for all the deets!
AUDIO COURSE
I created Mythic Journey to help you make sense of what you're craving, what's standing in your way and allow you to rewrite the narrative of your life, with you as the hero of the story.

S1E11: The treasure isn’t at the top of the mountain (it’s inside it)
January 5, 2026
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