Are you a womb-bearer seeking deeper connection and community?
Are you frustrated by the colonial, capitalist, patriarchal supression of our bodies and cycles?
Are you curious about tapping into the innate wisdom of your wombspace?
This co-created workshop is an invitation to slow down, listen deeply, and reconnect with the innate wisdom of the body through menstruality, Yoga, creative expression, and Reiki.
Rooted in decolonial, anti-oppressive, and embodied approaches, this offering creates a supportive space to explore how cyclical awareness, subtle energy, and collective care can become tools for healing, resilience, and liberation. Together, we weave ancient practices with contemporary embodiment to honour the body not as something to fix, but as a site of knowledge, intuition, and power. Together, we’ll explore our relationship to the womb and the bleed through intentional rest, intuitive discovery, and embodied practice.
No prior experience is needed - come as you are and begin the journey of reclaiming the innate power and wisdom of your womb.
This workshop is for those who menstruate and/or feel called to explore menstruality as a source of wisdom, creativity, and embodied knowing. No prior experience with yoga, Reiki, or creative practice is required - only a willingness to arrive as you are.
Costs: £30 (£24 Concessions) Low fee option available.
Please book in advance as there are limited spaces available. You can use the calendar icon on the booking system to scroll to the correct date
Facilitators
Charlotte Isadora is a menstruality mentor, yoga instructor, and embodiment facilitator whose work is grounded in decolonial theory and lived experience as a woman of colour. Her practice centres unlearning colonial capitalist conditioning and cultivating anti-oppressive, cyclical ways of being.
Hana Masters is a yoga teacher with over a decade of dedicated practice, weaving her Punjabi heritage with contemporary embodiment, mindfulness, and asana. Her teaching is rooted in social justice, cultural integrity, and community care, inviting yoga to be a practice of resilience, connection, and collective liberation.
