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At Return to Her, healing is not passive.
It is not a luxury.
It is not a soft side project while the “real work” of activism happens somewhere else.
Healing is the work.
When a woman chooses to rest, she is saying: I am not a machine.
When she dares to feel joy: My life is worth more than survival.
When she reconnects with her voice, her body, her truth: I refuse to be erased.
We are resisting more than exhaustion.
We are resisting the very systems that keep us too tired, too isolated, and too ashamed to rise.
We Are Resisting:
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🛑 A system that keeps us overworked, under-supported, and overwhelmed—so we can’t breathe, think, act, or simply be.
🛑 Cultural norms that tell us our only value lies in how well we meet others’ needs—how selfless, how small, how accommodating we can be.
🛑 Capitalism that ties our worth to what we produce, fix, clean, or carry—but never what we feel, dream, grieve, or create.
🛑 Patriarchy that teaches us to compete instead of connect, to apologize for our power, to feel unsafe in our own skin.
🛑 Religious and social conditioning that tells us our bodies are shameful, our desires dangerous, and our intuition untrustworthy.
What Does Resistance Look Like Here?
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It looks like circle gatherings and deep sleep.
It looks like singing around a fire.
It looks like spell jars and poetry.
It looks like saying no without guilt, and yes without apology.
It looks like walking through the woods without being watched.
Here, we don’t heal in isolation.
We do it together.
And in doing so, we reclaim what was always ours:
Wholeness. Voice. Rest. Sisterhood. Power.
Return to Her is a sanctuary—
But also a rebellion.
A quiet revolution made of blankets, stories, and laughter.
A resistance movement rooted in softness, safety, and truth.
Healing here isn’t about fixing what’s broken.
It’s about remembering:
We were never broken to begin with.
Return to Her is the beginning of a movement—
built for women to thrive.