12/27/2022 0 Comments Jamie lee finchSo when The Sisterhood opened, it was no question if I was going to join, because it's so aligned with what I'm trying to teach myself and the people I'm working with. That book was so important to me, and at this point, I’ve actually bought and given away more copies of it than my own book, because the ethic completely matches up with my work. Because my work is about breaking down objectifying systems, she told me about Proposals for the Feminine Economy. I found out about Sister from Caitlin Metz who designed my website and runs On Being in Your Body. What brought you to The Sisterhood, and how has it impacted your business so far? That’s very personal work, but it also includes education about the objectifying systems that taught us to relate to our bodies as if our bodies are an object or a machine-aka authoritarian religion, capitalism, white supremacy, patriarchy, ableism, diet culture, etc. I hold space for moving people from calling their bodies an “it” to treating their bodies like a person. My sexuality and embodiment coaching is generally a four to six month long program where I work with people to shift their perspective of their body from objectification to personification. I self-published a book last year called You Are Your Own reckoning with the religious trauma of Evangelical Christianity. This is a lightly edited transcript of their conversation.Ĭan you tell us about yourself and your business? She is a founding member of The Sisterhood, and she caught up with Amelia Hruby in the midst of COVID-19 shutdowns to discuss the importance of embodiment, challenges healers and people who hold space are facing right now, and what The Sisterhood means to her during these times. JAMIE LEE FINCH is a sexuality and embodiment coach, intuitive healer, self-conversation facilitator, sex witch, and poet.
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