The Approach
A grounded approach to spiritual awakening.
Not all spiritual change feels peaceful.
For many people, awakening can bring confusion, emotional intensity, identity instability, disconnection, or a loss of meaning. Modern spirituality often offers more stimulation, more concepts, and more self-improvement — while the deeper need is often clarity, grounding, and orientation.
Practical Awakening exists as a calm space for grounded spiritual inquiry, mature reflection, and orientation through the middle of awakening.
The Work
Four pathways toward grounded clarity.
01
Sessions
Grounded spiritual sessions offering clarity, reflection, orientation, and insight during periods of transition and awakening.
02
MOA
Middle of Awakening (MOA) is a framework for understanding the destabilising middle phase of spiritual awakening.
03
Retreats & Events
Quiet spaces for reflection, inquiry, conversation, and grounded spiritual exploration.
04
Writing
Essays and reflections on awakening, spirituality, philosophy, emotional overwhelm, and modern spiritual culture.
Courses
The Relationship Test
Group Course
A four month study of relationships & awakening—where insight meets intimacy, conflict, repair, and love.
Explore how closeness unfolds when old identities loosen: staying present without self-abandonment, meeting conflict without blame, repairing without grasping, and loving without clinging. This is not about getting it right, but about meeting relationship as it truly is—honestly, gently, and real human contact.
Come Home to Yourself
Group Course
A 8-Week Live Online Course
Most people spend their lives looking for something — the right relationship, the right achievement, the right version of themselves — without realising that what they are actually hungry for is already present. This course doesn't teach people how to find themselves. It gently dismantles the idea that they were ever lost.
Group Course
Most of us are carrying something we have never fully put down. A hurt that happened years ago and still surfaces without warning. A relationship that ended badly and quietly shapes the ones that followed. Something we did — or failed to do — that we have never quite forgiven ourselves for.
We manage it. We get used to its weight. We organise our lives around it without quite naming what we are organising around.
And slowly, almost imperceptibly, it costs us — in energy, in relationships, in the version of ourselves we have not quite been able to become.
Forgiveness As Freedom
From people who have found orientation here.