Befriend your body. Rewrite the story of your life.
BodyStory Erotic Alchemy Intake
Hello beautiful being. I’m so honored that you are coming to me for an exploration of your erotic nature and all its possibilities.
About Erotic Alchemy
Erotic Alchemy is a process that weaves together a wealth of modalities, including somatic sex education, yoga, Ayurveda, herbal medicine, witchcraft, narrative healing, and intuitive healing. This multi-faceted healing approach works with the body and mind to awaken or deepen the awakening of the sensual self.
Our work can include coaching in breath, movement, body awareness, boundary-setting, communication, anatomy, sensate focus, meditation, gentle yoga practices, erotic dance, massage, erotic trance, and other body-based teachings about sex and the erotic. My speciality is on rewriting the inner narratives of shame and unworthiness around sexuality and centering yourself as the hero in your story. You can expect to play with writing/journaling exercises, fantasy exploration, and rituals to break the “spells” of social conditioning around how you view your sexuality and open what is innate to your expression.
Some clients come with a specific intention in mind (such as healing traumatic sexual experiences, overcoming fear and shame of sexuality, exploring new ways to deepen pleasure, learning to express desires, and more). Others simply want to explore what they don’t yet know is possible in their bodies. Whatever brings you to this work, I welcome you on this journey that begins at the intersection of sex and spirit.
Everything that you share in this document will remain confidential and will be used only for the purposes of our work together.
Erotic Alchemy Application
Work with me

1:1 - Emotional Alchemy
Deeply personal 1:1 support

The Art of Worship
Experience the power of surrender and command

The Heartbreak Cure
Find the (r)evolution of love within
The Journal
Karma yoga (on the path of motherhood)
I like the skins on sweet potatoes. I enjoy their texture and I like knowing that there are nutrients in them. I also don’t particularly like peeling them. It adds an extra step that is not necessary, which makes a difference in the limited time I have to cook us a meal. But she doesn’t like them. If I leave the skins on anything — sweet potatoes, carrots, grapes, even chickpeas — she sticks out her tongue and spits until the offending characters out of her mouth. Perhaps the texture is too much for her smooth baby tongue. Or maybe she doesn’t have the right technique to adequately grind the skins down with these new teeth of hers. My job is to smooth the rough road ahead of her, so I peel the sweet potatoes before I put them in the food we will share.
This too with love
I lived on Kauai for the past two years. During that time I never seemed to see the news. No one I knew had televisions and I almost never saw a paper. But as we are transitioning our life to Mexico, I have been stationed at my in-laws’ house in a suburban purgatory for a month. This is my vacation to the rest of the world. Here, the news is a part of life.
It’s not that I value being uninformed. Quite the contrary. It is that I value learning what I need to learn without taking a healthy dose of fear alongside it. It is possible to do this, though it does take a bit of work because everyone has a slant, including me.
How I learned to become an Ayurvedic baker (plus a recipe for cookies you can eat for breakfast)
When I was in my early twenties, I woke very, very early and hauled myself into a kitchen of a cafe in Boulder, Colorado. I flipped on the lights at 5:00 a.m., turned on the ovens, and spent my morning hefting gigantic trays of steaming muffins, pies, and cookies from back of house to front.
Baking has been in my DNA since I was born, and it was delicious fun to live out my childhood fantasies as a professional baker. But as much as I loved spreading the perfect cream cheese frosting on a carrot cake, this new direction kept appearing for me. At the same time I was learning to perfect my cheesecake recipe, I was learning about the effects of refined sugar on my body. I was whipping up layer cakes while doing candida cleanses, and suddenly it just fell apart. I left my job as a sugarplum drug dealer and sadly tucked my apron deep into the back of my pantry.
“On this path effort never goes to waste, and there is no failure.”
The Bhagavad Gita 2:40
