We are mothers, artists, poets, mermaids, mystics, movers and shakers of soul

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Bridget Luff

is a mother-maker, movement teacher/mentor and art-lover. She creates opportunities for people to feel their bodies, be creative and listen to their intuition. Through the wildflower way she aims to support mothers to see their strength in sensitivity, spark their imaginations and to encourage their unique embodiment and flow.

⚘ Her dreamiest afternoon is spent sneaking into an art house cinema on her own and getting lost in cinematic wonder for a while.

⚘ Nature is her soul medicine, where she goes to recuperate.

⚘ She is a lover of the arts, a scribbler of too many journals and gets great joy from creating beauty in a home.

 
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Ana Muriel

is a Colombian mother of three living in the uk, student to Spirit, shapeshifter through the power of stories, movement facilitator, and mentor. Over the course of her life, she has been a creative entrepreneur on soulful projects that serve and uplift. She has been called to mentor mothers to step into their God-given roles as lifegivers and influencers.

⚘ She is a lover of music and has created playlists since she was a little girl, and remembers making them on old fashioned 80's cassettes. This habit continues and is a sweet therapy becoming a creative and devotional experience. Ana dances to them, moves to them, sings to them, prays with them. 

⚘ Favourite things are blueberries, baked granola, her mother’s spinach bake, a good salsa dance and a shower after a tough day. She would love to learn how to paint and become a writer of a book that inspires souls.

 
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Collaborators

We are joined by wise and wonderful women for each of our projects, those who’ve joined us in conversation include Lynn Murphy, Kristi Rodelli, Silvia Giovannoni, Naomi Absalom, Joanne King, Namvula Rennie, Tanya Markul, Samara Concepcion, Kerry Wilde and more. Watch our socials to find out who will be joining us each programme….

If I could give you one thought, it would be to lift someone up. Lift a stranger up--lift her up. I would ask you, mother and father, brother and sister, lovers, mother and daughter, father and son, lift someone. The very idea of lifting someone up will lift you, as well.

Maya Angelou