Daughter of the Spiral
Earth-Based Labyrinth Art Walks & Rest Retreats — Emerging Soon
What’s a labyrinth?
The labyrinth is an ancient sacred spiral—a walking meditation with a single, winding path that carries you inward to the center and gently back out again.
There are no wrong turns, no way to get lost—only the invitation to follow the spiral at your own pace, in your own way.
Some enter with a question or intention held close; others come simply to be present. Both are welcome.
Walk in solitude or in community, each step a quiet conversation with yourself. You may encounter insight, emotion, peace, or simply the steady rhythm of your feet on the earth.
Whatever arises is part of your unique journey through the spiral.
More about labyrinths
The sacred Labyrinth is based on the 13 moons, 13 turns, and there is an invisible star in the middle that always leads you home to yourself.
There are many different types of labyrinths, each shaped by the cultures and lands from which they emerged. For centuries, people across the world have walked these sacred spirals—for prayer, pilgrimage, reflection, and renewal.
Though their forms may vary, all labyrinths offer the same ancient invitation: to slow down, to listen, and to remember the wisdom held in your own body as you walk.
My Journey with the Labyrinth
As a child—and still, to this day—I found myself endlessly drawing spirals, never knowing why. They simply arrived through my hands, again and again, as if remembering something my mind had not yet caught up to.
My deep connection to nature and the land eventually led me into a deeper understanding of the labyrinth and the sacred spiral. Thirteen turns. Thirteen moons. Thirteen sacred trees woven through my work with Celtic wisdom and Yoga Nidra. And then—of course—my birthday: March 13th. At some point, the pattern could no longer be ignored. I realized I am a daughter of the spiral.
Even my business logo carries spirals within it—long before I consciously understood how deeply I was drawn to this ancient, sacred tool. The knowing lived in my body first.
One windy day on a beach in June, everything clicked into place. I was introduced to creating a giant Hopi Medicine Circle with a local artist. As we began drawing the first lines in the sand, something inside me lit up. A rush of overwhelming joy moved through me—pure, unmistakable recognition.
Creating giant spirals in the sand — simply resting beside them, drawing them, walking them — feels like coming home to me, a practice that naturally grew into these labyrinth gatherings.
Since that day, working with labyrinths has become a living part of my path and my passion. They now weave naturally through my offerings, my rituals, and my relationship with the land. I am deeply honored—and more than a little giddy—to share this sacred practice with you.
After all… once the spiral finds you, it never really lets go.
On that very same day, I met up with two beautiful soul sisters. I remember saying, “Come—look what we made.”
As we stood together, I began speaking about labyrinths, unaware that one of them was already preparing to train as a labyrinth facilitator.
When she shared this, my heart leapt—I had always felt that calling myself. Without hesitation, she invited me, and our other sister, to walk that path alongside her.
I later became part of a beautiful collective of women supporting our community through the Wild Grief Labyrinth project, an initiative made possible through a Healing Pathways Nova Scotia. A 24-foot portable canvas labyrinth fills the largest geodesic dome in Nova Scotia at Fireloch Retreat & Gathering Place, creating a powerful space for reflection and healing. Now, we also gather to facilitate full moon labyrinth walks for our community.
That windy day in June ignited something in me. As a nature-based meditator and facilitator, it is now my mission to create earth-based labyrinth art and restorative spaces — the kind that once lit me up on the shore — and to share that medicine of rest and reflection with others.