Inner Bloom
At the core of my work is helping people recognize and gently unravel the false self—the version of themselves that learned to stay safe by being agreeable, high-achieving, self-sacrificing, or “easy to love.”
Human beings are wired for connection. Developmental psychology shows that when certain emotions or expressions are met with rejection, withdrawal, or inconsistency, the body adapts. Not co
The story of the Buddha and why it is important today.
Answering questions about the portal.
Doors for the portal will be closing Friday. Join the amazing group of ladies who have committed to this journey.
At some point we realized it was not safe to be ourselves and so we sacrificed our own authenticity for belonging. It is time now for us to thank the masks for protecting us and see what lies underneath. Our authentic selves.
In a world obsessed with love and light, we’ve forgotten that true wholeness includes the dark.
We’ve been taught to hide our anger, our grief, our jealousy — to package ourselves into something “positive,” while the parts of us that ache for attention get buried deeper underground.
But here’s the truth: What we repress doesn’t disappear — it just rules us from the shadows.
And right now, as the world grows louder, faster, and more divided, shadow work is not just personal growth… it’s collective healing.
Shadow work asks us to slow down, to meet the parts of ourselves we’ve rejected — the shame, the fear, the unmet need for love — and to bring them home with love and compassion.
When we integrate our shadow, we stop projecting it onto others.
We stop fighting the world for what we’ve abandoned within ourselves.
We reclaim our power.
We remember our humanity.
This is the medicine our world needs right now — to turn toward our inner darkness, not to fix it, but to love it.
Because only when we embrace the whole of who we are
can we begin to heal — together.
Xoxo, Rebecca
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Detroit, MI
48202