185. Reclaiming the Divine Feminine: Healing Addiction Through Self-Love & Purpose (ft. Whitney Walker)
185. Reclaiming the Divine Feminine: Healing Addiction Through Self-Love & Purpose (ft. Whitney Walker)
In this powerful episode of the Embodied Writing Warrior Podcast, I’m joined by the radiant Whitney Walker—host of the Women Waken podcast and a passionate guide in the realms of divine feminine healing and addiction recovery.
Whitney opens up about her 20-year battle with eating disorders, substance abuse, and self-hatred—and how reclaiming her soul’s worth through purpose, spirituality, and the divine feminine helped her finally break free.
Together, we explore:
How addiction is often rooted in the core wounds of “I’m not safe” and “I don’t belong”
Why food can feel like love—but ultimately becomes a false sanctuary
How reconnecting to nature, silence, and your soul wisdom unlocks radical healing
Why we must move beyond conditional self-worth into embodied, unconditional love
The connection between creative expression, purpose, and addiction recovery
Tarot wisdom: the Devil vs. the Lovers, and what they teach us about freedom
This episode isn’t just about addiction—it’s about homecoming. If you’ve ever felt like you had to earn your worth, fight against your body, or hide your wildness to be loved… this conversation will remind you that your power lies in your presence—and your purpose is calling you home.
Whitney’s Embodiment Challenge:
Spend time in silence and nature. Ask: What is speaking to me? What within me wants to be expressed?
Connect With Whitney:
Transcript
Kayla: Hello Whitney and welcome back to the Embodied Writing Warrior Show.
Whitney: Hi Kayla. I'm so excited to be here on your revamp show. Yes, I've been on your show before, but it was not the Embodied Writer Warrior Show. I was
Kayla: gonna say, right, welcome back, might not have been the right term. However, you're still the perfect guest because you are a writer, a champion of the divine feminine.
You have a lot of experience helping people overcome addictions. So you are the perfect guest and I just love hanging out with you.
Whitney: With you. So I'm happy to be here and we always, we have a lot in common. We've faced a lot of the same challenges. We're, blazing a lot of the same trails in terms of what we wanna do with ourselves and our lives and our message and our work.
So,
Kayla: would love for you to just dive right in and share your experience with. Coming into the divine feminine, discovering it, how it really led you to a more creative, blissful life.
Whitney: Yeah, sure. Thanks Kayla. So I guess when I talk about coming into the divine feminine, I'll start with where I felt lost in a place without it, right?
To me, the divine feminine is a pure expression of life itself. Without any fear present, without any limitations, it is life. The divine is the feminine is that which brings life, which brings creation. And the masculine is that which supports those creations as you so beautifully have said. So when I was younger, I did not feel divine or feminine.
I did not. I really struggled deeply with self-rejection, which led to self-destruction. I did not believe I was something that was beautiful and perfect, and wonderful and loved. I was bullied a lot starting in seventh grade that lasted about seven years, and it was relentless. I was terrorized.
It was weird. It was weird in that it just didn't, I didn't understand it. I don't know why they, focused on me. I don't know why I received this, but it was truly consistent for all these years. And it really just hammered me with this idea of like. Whatever all these other people are. You know, girls who get attention, they get boyfriends like that.
You don't have that. There's something wrong with you. You don't have what they have. You're ugly, you're dumb, you're annoying. So like you need to just get real small and you need to like shut down a bit because anytime you try to show yourself, you get hurt. So I really started shutting down and that's a brutal feeling.
'cause like I said, the divine feminine to me is. Fully expressed. So when you try to not be expressed, it's like creative constipation. You're just stuck in this energy of knowing that you are meant to shine like everybody else, but you've decided, no, not me. I can't do that. People told me I'm stupid.
They told me I'm ugly. I can't what? Nobody wants to see this and that, that sense, that confinement, that imprisonment that so many humans do. This is not limited to women by any means. All humans unfortunately, get the message that. If you are not like what people wanna see or hear, then you better go away.
Right? We're told that it's very, you know, a very small box that you need to fit in to be acceptable. So at about like 14 years old, I turned to food. I was in a terrible place of depression. I didn't understand it right. I'd always been pretty happy. And then once I started being bullied and rejected by my peers, I didn't know how to, like, how do I live with not being able to accept myself with kind of hating who I am?
And then that last lack of acceptance, not being able to accept who I am turns to a lot of self hatred. Where you're like, why did you do this? Why did you have to be so ugly and so dumb? I don't like you. And that's bad company when you don't like yourself and you're your own worst enemy.
You're in very bad company with yourself. And unfortunately, well, it ends up being a beautiful thing. But at that, when you're in that place, it's. There's nowhere to go. You're stuck with yourself. So I turned to food. I had always liked food and I will never forget the first time where I, you know, they, I call it walking through the looking glass where it's like you pass through this passageway where you can have this weird, strange relationship with food and eating that becomes like your own little drama and world that helps you escape the, your real life that's so uncontrollable.
I had no control. People did not like me, and there's nothing I could do. I literally would have these people laugh in my face and tell me how ugly I was, and I had to just sit there and be like, okay. And I didn't have any support from people close to me that were like, you're amazing as you are. You have all these great traits.
I was told, but you know, well, maybe you make sure you don't gain too much weight, like you look better when you're thinner. Like those messages instead, that's still very conditional where it's like, well then do something about it so that you're more pleasing to people. It was just very lonely and sad, and scary, and so food felt immensely comforting to me, and I walked through that looking gloss.
One night I was, it was the summer before my sophomore year of high school. And. I was at a cousin's house and everybody went to sleep and I stayed up and I thought, Ooh, the kitchen, like maybe there's something good. I went through every single cupboard and got every single cookie and treat and just ate them all.
Any addiction, including an eating disorder has several components. It's something that soothes you. You find something that soothes you. It's your secret thing. That night I was like, fuck yeah, nobody knows I'm down here. I get to eat all this stuff and just stay up late.
It's my own little indulgence, my own little pleasure place that nobody else can have. It's mine. And then on top of that, it was like, you know. It was just this, it was filling something. The, the thing about our relationship with food is you can't deny the fact that it's, you're putting something into your body that otherwise feels empty.
And yes, it's a cliche to say we're like filling a hole, but you really are. Whether it's drugs, sex, food, you're looking to fill something that you have no freaking clue how to fill. The ironic part, it's not about filling it, it's just about acknowledging that you are full. You're complete as you are. But again, we get all these messages that are like, if you're not good enough and pretty enough and accepted enough, then you do have a hole in you.
There's something very wrong. So that was like the starting point, and it led to. You know, I had an eating disorder for 20 years. I abused substances. I treated myself so poorly. I discovered binge eating, but then I quickly realized, well, shoot, if I binge eat, I gain weight, and then I'm even less desirable.
And that won't do so I discovered bulimia and that just became my closest companion. I mean, talk about like your own secret fucked up world. Anybody who struggle with bulimia knows that it's, it's kind of like temporary insanity. It's this really weird thing where it, and it almost feels good because also when you hate yourself that much, it feels good to kind of lose your mind.
You're like, yeah, so what? I'm fucking crazy. Fuck you all. I don't give a fuck. I'm gonna do this weird shit. And again, it's any addiction girls who like go and, you know, they use their sexuality to get attention. It's like, fuck you to the world. I'm gonna use my body, I'm gonna be sexual. But we don't realize.
There's that part of us that's actually just wants to be loved. And it becomes this whole, and everything comes back to love. You know, you turn to food because in some way it feels like it loves you. Like, this feels good. This isn't nurturing me. This is something I can do. But it's like this twisted relationship where it's, it's not love anymore.
So my point is, I dove deep into that. I couldn't get out of it. I mean, the thing about an eating disorder that's such a bitch is, I always say it's like step, it's like getting gum on your shoe. Suddenly it's there and you just can't get rid of it. It's like, how did this even happen?
And now how does it go away? Because I remember thinking, when I was younger. I'd never give a second thought to eating. I enjoyed it, but it was so natural. And now how can it possibly be so confusing? This thing, eating. I didn't know what normal eating was anymore. Every single day. All I thought about was food for probably 10 years.
And I couldn't. And anybody who's had a mental obsession, whether it's like a crush or after a breakup, and you're like, why does this person live inside my head? Well, when you have an addiction or an eating disorder, it's the same thing. You're like, why does this live with me and I cannot get rid of it?
And it's because it's the part of us that feels like we have to hold onto something to have a sense of self or a sense of safety. The truth is that the only true experience is letting go. You don't have to hold onto anything, but until you believe that it's safe to do that, you will hold onto things, including destructive and addictive means like eating disorders, substance abuse, all of that.
So my whole point of all this is I was lost. I was very lost. I did not see the divine feminine in myself. I had moments of it right. Moments I'd be like, wow, I'm actually really like pretty bold and I'm pretty brave and I'm can be pretty interesting and kind of like hardcore badass. But then the taunting would come back.
The insults or just the memory of it, right? Where it's like, no, no, no, you're not, you're not those things, you're not good. You're not impressive. You need to just shut yourself away. And that's when I would turn back to the substances and the eating disorder. So fast forward to. Let's see. It was about when I was like getting closer to my thirties.
I got sober when I was 29 from, uh, drugs and alcohol. My eating disorder just continued on. I would have periods and years without binge bingeing or, well, no, I was always binging without purging. Then I'd get back into restriction, you know, like it's, I also equate an eating disorder to a Rubik's cube.
Where like suddenly a natural relationship becomes this thing that you're constantly trying to figure out. And you know, Kayla, you've described this when you were a health coach. There's so many people out there that are just trying to tell you what you should do to figure out your eating situation and your relationship with food.
You cannot tell anybody that there's no magic formula. The only magic formula is to resolve the freaking pain within you that's causing you to believe that you're not lovable and that you're, you're not of the divine. I got sober and it was what opened the door for me to realize that I didn't need to hate myself.
And there actually truly was something perfect and eternally lovable about me. And it took years and years. It's been 10 years since I got sober. And. It was hard. You wrestle with it, right? It's like you have these revelations where it's like, whoa, what if there is more to me than just how I present or how impressive I am?
Like what if there's actually something inside of me that's just. Pure love and what if that's actually what life really is and what if that's when people talk of God, that's actually this thing that just is unconditionally expressed lovingly. And I was like, yeah, I like that. I knew it. And we all know it inherently.
That's my belief. We all inherently know that that's the truth. And we're just kind of here having this game of like, how do you learn to love yourself even when you. Are endowed with the belief that perhaps you're not enough. Maybe you're not of the divine, maybe there is no divine, uh, in, on the earth experience.
We have that experience of thinking like, well, maybe there isn't that. Where when, to me, when you're embodied in your full self, your divine self, you know that inherently. Anyways, the point is that I started walking my way. I call it the long walk back to yourself. The moment I got sober, I hit absolute rock bottom.
Absolute. I was starving myself mostly because I was on drugs and I didn't want to eat. And it was so weird. It was like I was at like the thinnest I've ever been, just like bones, and I just, I was having a panic attack because I didn't, I was taking too many pills. It was just a nightmare. And I literally, in a public place, had a total meltdown.
I had a panic attack on my knees sobbing. I like literally. Was in this like little mini mall and I walked into these bushes to hide 'cause I couldn't stop crying and I just like dropped to my knees and I like. That was the moment where I realized like, I absolutely fucking hate myself.
I hate who I am and I can't live this way anymore. And it was after that moment that I realized that I needed to change. And that's where I began again, what I call the long walk back to myself because I had drifted so far from embodying myself and who I am and getting acquainted with my soul. And that was the journey I took.
So. Over these past 10 years, different books, different people, different understandings came into my life. That all led to me discovering this concept of the divine feminine. I went to the uk. I did a UK trip in 2019 before the world Shut down England, Ireland, Scotland, my heritage, right?
And I came back from that trip and I swear my, it was like my ancestors had infused me with the work that they had done, which is you need to bring women together, you need to bring women together. You need to encourage people to love and embrace themselves, to be authentically themselves, to free themselves from the confines and the chains that everybody lives in.
And it starts with women. That's what I kept getting was like, it's the divine feminine, it's the women. It's not here. That's not embraced in your world. And I was like, whoa, what? Where is this all coming from? So that's where I really realized, you know, I'm not sure what this is all about, but I do know that I need to focus on working with women and bringing women together.
And I've been doing that ever since and ever since my understanding and my relationship. With the divine feminine has grown and blossomed into this sort of movement of, you know, we are really meant to have the presence of both divine, feminine and masculine. And right now we don't really have both. We have a lot of masculine but not very divine and we just have, don't really have much feminine at all, I would say.
So blending of the two, that's what's up. That's where I'm at now.
Kayla: You have been on quite the journey, and what I love about your journey is that you went from that place of addiction, that place of two core wounds that stood out to me, and I think these are two of the biggest core wounds in most women.
One, I'm not safe, and two, I don't belong. And you were actually able to go on this journey of healing. Then you stepped into your purpose work and that was what seemed to really help heal the addiction. So can you speak to how finding one's purpose and just diving more into the divine feminine can really help someone you know, heal any addiction they might be going through?
Whitney: Yeah, absolutely. Well, as I was saying, any addiction is just an attempt to soothe. Escape from something, right? And anything that you're trying to soo or escape from is a falsehood because it's based in fear. So let's take this then to the idea of fear versus love, or what I like to refer to as conditional versus unconditionality.
And to me that's the crux of everything really in our world. Are you choosing to have a conditional relationship with yourself, with others, with love, with trust, with success, or are you choosing unconditionality? When we talk about unconditional, it means freedom. Humans are meant to be free.
There's a great quote. Humans are free yet everywhere. They live in chains. We don't, we're not born with chains. We have created them for ourselves and that is the revolution. Revolution that's gonna happen on our planet is when people realize what chains, you know, you know that I'm a tarot reader, right.
Kayla? So my favorite cards in, or two of my favorite cards in the deck, 'cause I love their juxtaposition. The devil and the Lover's card in tarot are basically the same depiction. One is with this demon creature, the devil. And he has these two naked people in front of him. And they're in chains, but they're chains are not latched.
They're open, but they're still standing there as if like, gotta do what this guy says. I gotta stay here in fear. In conditionality, which is, you know this, this person is providing me with something, so I have to stay locked in here. Right? I don't have my own choices. That's conditionality. Then the lover's card shows this bright sun shining angel with two naked people in front of them, no chains, open Uncondition.
They're because they're making their choices out of love. So they realize they're, they're doing it from their own volition, from their own, you know, expression. They're free in the double card. They're making decisions based on fear. I need to do this in order to keep this dah, dah, dah, dah, dah. That's false.
We don't have to do anything. That's the other key, that when humanity realizes that we set ourselves free, everything changes. Right now, most people live more in the devil energy conditionality. Right. I don't believe in the devil except the the devil that we create, which again, is that idea that, just like I talked about, I struggled with, I'm not worthy because I'm not attractive, and I have been told that I am worthless, so therefore I have to earn.
My love. I have to earn these things. I have to change myself. But the biggest thing though, not even pleasing other people, I was trying to convince myself in a conditional manner that I was good enough. If you get enough male attention, if you're told that you're attractive, if you're told that you're impressive and successful, that you're smart, that you're funny, then you're good enough, then you can be loved.
Conditionality, right? You're saying that only if then the nature of the divine feminine and the nature of releasing yourself from addiction and all these things that keep you bound is to recognize that you are unconditionally perfect and lovable just as you are. And unfortunately it sounds like something out of like a Care Bear episode where people are like, okay, whatever.
But like obviously it's better to be attractive and rich and it's like, is it though we have decided that? We have decided that Another quote that I always think about, Marilyn Monroe said that Hollywood is a place that will give you a thousand dollars for a kiss and 50 cents for your soul. We've created a world where we've said, your soul, what?
Who cares about that? That's not how. How are you gonna get power from that? Are you getting money from that? No. Forget your soul. Everything is external. Everything is more of that devil energy. If then if you're a rich, if you're successful, if you're attractive, all of these things, then you're a value.
Humanity will one day figure out that the most powerful thing in this world is love and the most valuable thing is your soul. And when that happens, people will be free. Just like you're talking about in the work that you're doing now, Kayla, you're encouraging people to recognize, have fun with who you are, with your own wildness, with your own magic.
That is what life is about. I'm also big on this. I'm not big on saying that the way things are is bad. Because that just keeps us in this loop of duality. You know, conditionality, either you're good or you're bad. Same thing goes for addiction to anybody out there. I get so worked up when I talk, I get excited. This stuff brings me to life. This is my soul coming out if you haven't noticed, and I love it. So anybody out there struggling with an eating disorder or an addiction, I wanna tell you this with all my heart, 'cause I've been there. There's nothing wrong with you.
There's nothing wrong with you. You are doing your best to try and save yourself, to try and support yourself to try and survive. In my recovery, I've had people kind of allude to the fact that when you were drinking and abusing drugs, you were bad and you can't go back to being bad. You should be very scared of being bad again.
I don't believe that. I believe that there was nothing wrong with me then, and there's nothing wrong with me now. I'm also big into that what you experience as a human being is what the human species is also experiencing at a greater level.
It's all the same right now. You look around our world and there's so much fighting, tension, struggling, addiction, illness, all of that suffering. The more that we keep calling it bad, the more we. Solidify what is the more we give energy to it, when you can recognize more just, wow, look at where we are.
Isn't that interesting? How can we shift our experience? Not calling it bad, not trying to fight against it. Just like an addiction. If you, Kayla, you said that you kind of moved away from traditional health coaching because they're, they're literally trying to tell you to fight against yourself.
You can't eat those foods. You have some discipline. You fight yourself. I don't believe that. As long as you put certain terms on yourself, you're locking yourself in and you're saying, only if this am I good. Only freedom will ever bring you true peace and love and acceptance of yourself.
And you know, look at us like we're both moving in that direction with our work. Because to me, that's the future. It really is. Humans are meant to be free. Only we can set ourselves free. But right now, we all look to things outside of ourselves to fit us, set us free.
I believe in coaching, but I think too many people say, I need a coach for this and I need them to tell me what to do. Can't happen. Just like when you're suffering with an addiction, nobody can tell you point blank how to solve it. It's a very unique thing that's very complex existing within you. It took me years and years to untangle all of these knots within me and release a lot of this story energy and trauma to reach a place where I truly can say that I don't have an eating disorder.
And I never thought I would say that 'cause my relationship with food was so fucking brutal and so exhausting Also. I always like to say this, anybody with an eating disorder who's listening to this, like, please be gentle with yourself, because nobody realizes how exhausting it is. Mm-hmm. And it's not a coincidence that women are the ones who experience it the most because we are so fucking strong and driven and determined that we will do an eating disorder like nobody's with all our might.
Right. And it takes everything. And it's exhausting. It's also exhausting to have something that you just feel like you can't. Get, get rid of her, let go of. But I don't, I, I can't even say what it was that released this from me, but something was released and I just don't have this turmoil I approach food naturally and I never thought I would, not to say that I don't like, I still freaking love sweets and like given the option all, you know, but it's not the same thing.
You know, there's a big difference. Right. To just be like, oh, delicious cake to be like. You know, like I was describing addictions before, it's like your own little intimate world. And I know that I was addicted to food because it was more important to me than almost anything. And I would've chosen to spend time alone with food than to go out and do other things.
And for anybody listening, I have a few episodes on my podcast because people ask this, how do you know when you have an actual eating disorder? How do you know when you have an actual addiction? A lot of it is the secretiveness and the preoccupation with it, where it literally becomes like your number one, even above yourself.
You're like, I just wanna be with this. And it literally is just showing you that you so desperately want love and support, but feel like you can't find it in an authentic, natural way.
Kayla: Absolutely. And one of the things I loved that you touched on there was this idea that. We get to feed the story we wanna feed, so we can feed that story of like condition of fear, or we can tell the story of unconditionality of love and at the end of the day, I believe it's all invented.
So we can invent those conditions or we can invent that expansive, unconditional space that you've dropped into.
Would make a educated intuitive guess that one of the things that helped you break free from your addiction was just dropping into your life's work, your purpose work. And I think when women do that and when they get quiet, when they connect with themselves and they figure out what that work is, they're like, I don't have time to do this food drama triangle all day, every day, all the time.
Because now they have. Things are meant to be out in the world doing, and I think that's such a big thing for anyone struggling with an addiction to think about is you're actually here to do big things. And the more you can get quiet and figure out what those things are, and then take those intentional action steps towards it, that food stuff is gonna crowd itself out, which is so magical.
Whitney: Okay, so this makes me think, I remember one time I did this crazy tarot spread about like the state of the world. And I'll never forget this one card I got that was like, what's going on with humans? Like, why are we all addicted? Why are we, and I got the night of wands in reverse and the instant thing that came to me was we all have infinite, universal, divine, creative power within us.
And we're told. Oh, well the only way to use that is to like get a nine to five job or to like you can be an art, whatever it is. Most of us are, we have no, we have all this energy and nowhere to channel it.
Like I was saying, like with an eating disorder, you could, I remember telling someone once, I was like, I feel like I could fuel a whole city with the energy I give to my eating disorder. It was so much, and just what you said, now I give that energy to speaking, to sharing, to inspiring others and that feels a whole heck of a lot better.
'cause it's, and it's a lot more useful, right? Yeah. So I, yeah, I, I feel that way completely. And also what you said, I say this all the time. If you don't like the state of the world, if you're like, how did we get here? Then acknowledge that we got here, we created this, it's our creation, and we can recreate this world anytime we want to.
Just like every single individual person can recreate themselves. That's the magic of ourselves there's nothing that's, permanent we're always able to recreate ourselves and the world.
So let that be your inspiration. And I think a lot of people think like, well, you know, this is just who I am and I've already chosen this path, chosen this work. You can change it anytime. You know. And ika again, just like you're doing, like you're reinventing what your, your, your focus is. You're reinventing your offerings.
That's the beauty of life. We're always able to change. Nothing static. Everything is just waiting to be recreated, and that's our world. So another thing that you can do if you're frustrated looking around, invest your time in something that you believe that's missing in the world, that you believe the world could benefit from, that the world would be a, a higher experience if this were so.
It's even if, especially if it's weird, we need weirder stuff. We need people who are thinking outside the box right now. You know? And not just for like the next big innovation or the next big thing to make a lot of money. No, we're talking about new ways of living and being in the world.
Again, that's gonna be this new revolution we have as humans is when people start saying, what if we live this way? Our world will is going to change so much in the next few hundred years, you know, and it could be in a really beautiful, amazing way with greater freedom, greater unconditional love, and regard for ourselves and others, and greater creative expression.
And who knows what we'll create with that, right?
Kayla: Absolutely, yes. And if you were to give. The listeners today that have been listening some kind of an embodied challenge so they can take more everything we just talked about and put it into some kind of a practice, what would you give them?
Whitney: So like something they can do regularly.
Kayla: It can be a journal prompt, it can be a type of breath work you enjoy. Anything that you're just feeling called to share.
Whitney: Yeah.
A big shift for me happened when I started spending more time in silence and in nature because I have a lot of energy, and so I'm always on the go. I'm always moving. It's hard for me to slow down. But when I got outta nature and I slowed down a big shift for me and my perspective was when I realized and looked around at the world and I said, it's all just unfolding and it's not trying to force anything and there's not a lot of fear out here.
And in that silence and in that inspiration from nature, also animals, I'm a big fan of time with animals 'cause it just brings out this sense of safety and a sense of love and natural regard for things and creatures. You'll start to sense something within you.
There is something uniquely magic in every individual, including you who's ever listening. That's your 'cause, okay? Here's my thing. Humanity is like a mosaic, and right now we have this idea of like, well, there's only like so many people who actually matter, right? Everybody else is just kind of, no. Every single.
Soul on this planet that's a part of humanity is a part of this music mosaic, and everyone has their own unique colors and vibrancy that makes up this beautiful overall picture. So the practice I'm offering is what is within you is do you wanna inspire people? Do you wanna care or you know, support people and help them heal?
Do you wanna work towards creating something that creates more joy? Joy is a huge thing. That's another thing that we minimize. But joy is honestly the only reason we're here. Is joy to have fun. So just take that time and think, what do I feel? What do I hear when I'm just with myself in this quiet place in nature?
What's speaking to me? Because of course, you know, divine feminine, it's that inner wisdom, the women's intuition. There is a voice inside of you that has the answer to everything you've ever asked. You literally have the divine inside of you. And the divine is all knowing everything is already there.
You have all the wisdom you need right inside yourself. So my challenge to you, my embodiment practice, is to find that time in silence and to see like, who are you? What is it inside of you that's whispering to you saying, why don't you try this? What about this thing you've always loved? Why not try to pursue that a little bit?
And even if it seems weird or if it seems unreasonable or not logical, forget that we've been doing reasonable and logical for too long.
Kayla: I totally agree, especially on the weird and illogical pace because that is the feminine coming through. That's the, the unique, the self-express, the authentic, and I think more women need to access that without worrying about the fear of judgment or being weird or not belonging, because there are going to be other people out there when you share it that actually need that medicine.
Maybe not in the exact same way, but you're gonna shift something in them that they might not have been able to shift otherwise.
Whitney: Yes, absolutely. And even if whoever listening thinks more logically, just consider this, that if you look around your home, every single thing you see was once just an idea that people said, that's not possible.
I'm looking at a tv, I'm looking at my laptop, I'm looking at a refrigerator. There was a time where people were like, that will never be, it's not possible. We're always gonna use horses. We're always gonna use, you know, an icebox or this or that. Anything is possible, and that's the absolute truth.
So anything that's rising up inside of you, anything that intrigues you, explore it, go with it. There is no such thing as impossible.
Kayla: Absolutely. So Whitney, thank you so much for being here. It has been so good to connect with you again, and obviously you have your Women Waken podcast, which I 10 outta 10 recommend and we'll link in the description.
If people wanna connect with you further, how can they do so?
Whitney: Yeah, I'd love for people if they resonate with what I'm speaking about or wanna learn more about the divine feminine or working with me on, you know, releasing some of this, this stuck energy, conditional stuff, all that I love to connect on Instagram.
So if you find me on there, if you send me a message, I'd love to chat. I'll also pull a card for you if you find me there. That's my, like I said, I'm a tarot reader, so that's my thing I like to do. So yeah, that's the best way. But I'd love for you to check out the show too. The podcast has some good stuff on there.
Kayla: He has so many good episodes on there. I love the astrology themed ones and whenever you pull cards on there, that's always awesome
Whitney: yes. I gotta get back to that. I have, sometimes you kind of, you do one thing, you swing all around. But I do love my Astrology Tarot episodes.
Kayla: Alright, well thank you again
Whitney: Thank you so much Kayla. I'm so proud, honored to be a guest on your new revamp show. I'm excited for you.