The Femme Cast

Stop Calling Us Angry Feminists | The Truth About Women, Safety, and Feminine Power

Maria Rei

The label “angry feminist” has long been used to silence women, dismiss their voices, and keep them disempowered. But behind that label isn’t irrational rage—it’s centuries of generational trauma, systemic violence, and the deep desire for safety and equality.

In this unapologetic edition of The Feminine Awakening Series: Rebel, Rise, Radiate, I dismantle the stereotype of the “angry feminist” and reveal the truth: anger is not the enemy—it’s sacred wisdom. It’s the survival instinct of women who’ve been raped, beaten, harassed, and silenced for far too long.

Globally, 1 in 3 women experience physical or sexual violence—most often from an intimate partner. And yet, we’re still told to forgive quickly, to soften, to keep our hearts open… even when the world has not made itself safe for us.

I share my own story—being harassed, groped, and propositioned by men I trusted before I was even of age—and how those wounds shaped both my healing and my reclamation of feminine power. Like so many women, I still walk home with my keys spiked between my knuckles, check the back seat of my car, and text a friend before every first date. These are not signs of paranoia—they’re survival strategies.

But here’s the truth:

🎤 Anger is not a flaw—it’s a portal to liberation.
🎤 Boundaries are not walls—they’re proof of self-worth.
🎤 Healing isn’t about dismissing pain—it’s about transforming it into power.
🎤 True empowerment comes from balancing both masculine and feminine energies within us all.

This episode is more than a conversation—it’s a reclamation of voice, power, and possibility. Stop apologizing for your anger. Honor it as sacred. Use it to create a world where women are safe, valued, and free.

Ready to stop shrinking for others? Let this episode be your sign → Step into your Unapologetic Era: https://thefemmecast.com/breakthrough

MARIA:

Hey guys, what is up? And welcome back to the show. I am so excited and grateful to have you guys here. Welcome if you're new. Today is part three of the Feminine Awakening Edition. Rebel, Rise and Radiate. Please stop calling feminists angry feminists. And maybe you haven't, and maybe that's why you're here and you're listening to this episode. But the world has got to stop calling us feminists angry feminists, or portraying us and labeling us as angry feminists. Um today we're going to talk about the truth about feminism, women, safety, and the masculine. So, and if you haven't listened to the masterclass episode yet, or the last couple of episodes, go listen to them now. There is actually a link in the show notes that'll give you access to all of the um episodes within this playlist. So there's going to be six in total. One is the master class, which is the nine sacred feminine superpowers, and then followed by five more episodes about how, you know, our evolution and healing the masculine and the feminine within, and how we learn to embody um our feminine more. So um sorry, I'm getting notifications. Okay. I've heard many people say this, you know, oh, feminists are just a bunch of angry feminists, right? Just portraying us as these angry women who go around hating on men, which I mean, yeah, you know what, maybe there is some of those, but not all of us are like that. And I think that I think that, you know, this is again, I hate to say this, but I think this is more patriarchal conditioning that is basically making women feel bad for being a feminist or or deter wanting to deter women from being a feminist. Because if you're a feminist, then you know, no one's gonna love you, no one's gonna want you, you're never gonna be, you're gonna, you're gonna die a lonely cat lady, as some people would love to call us. Um by the way, I don't have cats. Just saying. Um, you know, like I it it is it is bad, it is more patriarchal conditioning to keep women and the feminine in a disempowered state. Now, I don't know if they're doing this consciously or unconsciously or subconsciously, but I don't know. I'm finding it very hard to believe that they don't know what they're doing when they do this, you know? It's like, you know, it's it's it's the equivalent of like, and I see this all the time. It's like, you know, somebody steps into their power and suddenly you make them feel like that's somehow pad or butt punishable, or they're gonna be alone if they do that, or no one's gonna love them or want them. Like, who's gonna want somebody like you? Right? Or it's like the person who, you know, someone hurts you and does a bad thing, and then when you call them out, you become the bad guy. No. Okay, we have to, we have to start to be a little bit. I'm not talking about being guarded. I am not talking about being hateful or resentful towards men. There are many, I am telling you guys, there are many amazing men out there who love being in their heart space and who love opening their hearts up to women. Many. And they are out there, but unfortunately, part of our task is to be able to discern between the two. Okay, because they're not all like that. Just like not all women are good women. Like we're just people. We're people, there are good people, and there are bad people. And the reality is we need to be able to discern between the two, and there's nothing wrong with that. And we need to be able to kind of stand up for ourselves and be in our strength and set our boundaries and be able to ask what we want without being ashamed for that, like being shamed for that, you know. Um, so here's the thing. Here's what I will say about the feminist movement and the healing that took place as a result. Because, you know, I heard this from a coach. I heard a coach say this that, you know, all that's why when you see feminists, they're all so angry. They're angry, their carts are closed off to men. They've completely closed off to the masculine, you know. Um, and it's like, because of, and and at first, you know, he kind of said, you know, it's because of, you know, centuries of being oppressed and raped and stoned and burned at the cross. And and and, you know, but you know, those days the the those days are it's kind of like saying, like, those days are done. Like, kind of like get been there, done that, get over it, you know. Um, and then, you know, kind of went on in one of his, you know, um, what's it called, live events, making a woman who was a rape victim look at a total stranger of a man and say, you need to be able to see the God in him, which is true. We all have God within. I believe that we do, but I'm not about to tell a rape victim to open her heart to a total stranger and say and say, Hey, you need to feel safe with this dude, even though you have no idea who he is. You haven't like, no, no, we don't do that. We recognize, we have to recognize two things. There are good people on this earth and there are bad people on this earth, and that is just the way it is. Okay. There are good energies and there are bad energies, and we need still need to practice discernment. Okay. Um, and we need to be able to call out when we're not being treated fairly, when we're, you know, we've gotten the short end of the stick, when our boundaries aren't being respected, when we're, you know, not given the opportunity to be fully expressed and to be fully ourselves, when we're being discriminated again against just for being women, because it's still happening. And we get to say something about it, and we get to say something and not feel bad about it, and can still, and can still be open-hearted, loving women to the right person. Okay, again, discernment. There was another point I was gonna make to this. Oh, that was the other point. And the reality is is because we have good, but you know, we have both good and bad people on the planet, and you know, we're all just kind of here, kind of you know, dwelling together. And I I'm joking, but this is not a joke. There is still a ton of violence and crime that goes on against women. Okay, women are attacked, raped, uh, and brutally abused every day just for being women. And I am not saying that lightly. Like the w like listen, we've come a long way, yeah, but we are not out of the woods yet. I'm gonna read my notes now because I want to make sure that I don't I don't misquote something. So globally, okay, and I check these stats with you know online with Google and with ChatGPT, but globally, one in three women will experience physical or sexual violence at the hands of a man, and most of those, most of those will be from an intimate partner. Now, if that doesn't make you crap your pants, I don't know what will. Okay, that accounts for approximately, get this, a staggering 641 million women. Okay. None of this accounts for the ones that go unreported because the reality is that when, and I've I've been here where you, you know, you got abused. We don't know whether it was emotional, for me it was more emotional abuse. It wasn't so much physical abuse, but I have had my fair share of uh what do you want to call it? Like physical assaults, like sexual assaults, like not rape, but where I was like groped inappropriately or propositioned inappropriately by somebody like much older than me when I was a child or when I was at work and it was my boss, or you know, when it was a total stranger groping me, like, you know, like at random and a crowded club, you know what I mean? Like roofing my drink. You know, these things happen and they they've I've experienced them, and all of my friends have experienced them. We all have, you know, and it is still not a safe world for women. And we need to all, men and women, we need to, we need to actually say it. We need to actually call it out and say, hey, this is still not a safe world for a woman to be in. And we need to make it safe. So for all the men out there that are like, you know, preaching that, oh, you know, it's just, you know, women are holding on to too much anger. They need to open their hearts. What are you gonna do to make a safe world for women? Because we all need to be doing that. And if I'm gonna be called an angry feminist because I'm doing my part in doing that, then so fucking be it. Call me an angry feminist. Go for it. But I am literally, I've I've, you know, I've done a lot of work, you guys. Like I did have a lot of healing to do because, like I said, I was, you know, mistreated a lot by men. I was um objectified a lot by men, especially when I was younger and even when I was older and and and you know, kind of making my way in my career and in the workplace, you know. Um, I was objectified by men again and again and again. And I had a lot of healing to do around that. And I it really took a lot of work for me to be able to open my heart up again um and feel safe. And you know what? The only way I do that now is through a lot of discernment, a lot of discernment and really being able to really assess who those safe spaces are and really trusting and honoring what my intuition is telling me and being unapologetic about when it's telling me this isn't safe. And and, you know, it happened a couple months ago when I was out there online dating again, where you know, somebody just kept trying to get me alone. And I was like, listen, dude, not gonna happen. Okay, I move at a glacial pace, deal with it. Okay. Um I am not gonna be alone with a total stranger. That's just not how I do shit anymore. Maybe that's how I did shit when I was younger, but I know me. I know, I know myself, I value myself, and I value um, you know, what I bring to the table in a relationship, emotionally, mentally, physically, energetically. And I am not, I'm not, I am not going to put myself in a situation where um, you know, I'm in a quiet um place with you until I know for sure who you are and what you're all about. Because, you know, one in three women, guys, one in three women, and most of them are from intimate partners. So, you know, and this person just did not understand it, couldn't understand why I kept putting up boundaries, couldn't understand why I kept saying, you know, I prefer if we meet in a public place, I prefer if, you know, whatever. Couldn't get it. So I cut it off very quickly. I think by like the second or third date, I cut it off, or like before the third date, I cut it off. As we were getting ready for our third date, I think. And I was like, no, I'm not playing this game, you know, and I've, you know, and it's it's not, it's not because we're angry. It anger has nothing to do with it. It's about being honest about, you know, the world we live in and being able to discern and set boundaries as we need to, and being really clear and upfront about what we need in order to feel safe. So until we can create a safe world where it's not dangerous out there just because you're a woman and because you have long hair, or because you're wearing a short skirt, or because you know you're wearing like, you know, whatever. This is this, this, this is how I choose to move through the world. I choose to move through the world knowing that there are amazing men out there. And I've met so many of them who have open hearts, who are willing to love and respect a woman, to, to, to open their heart to her and let her open her heart to him, and being able to be in this intimate, beautiful exchange with them, and also, you know, being able to like, you know, hold that safe space, hold that structure, hold that foundation, right? And being able to recognize that not all men are like that. And that's that's fine. It's the evolution that we're moving through. But I'm still gonna go out there and I'm gonna, you know, I'm gonna practice discernment. I'm gonna practice setting up boundaries, I'm gonna practice expect expressing my truth unapologetically. I'm gonna practice um, you know, asking for what it is that I need to feel safe in a relationship. And if that's gonna be met with um pushback, then yeah, you are gonna see an angry feminist. I hate to say it, but bitch, it's what it is. Uh, and I'm okay with that. Like, I am totally okay with that. But, you know, I kind of like I kind of digress. So, you know, let's talk about, let's go back because we talked about this a little bit last week, and I want to kind of touch back on this a little bit again. Feminists, uh the feminist movement in general, like femin, fem women who identified as feminists, yes, many of them were angry. And to this this coach's point, yes, you know, we were healing through a lot of generations of trauma and abuse and persecution and oppression and sexual violence against women. But like I said, we're not done. Like we're still here. It's just, it's different now. You know, it's a little bit more socially acceptable trauma, right? And I'm laughing, but it's not funny. Like, I, you know, when people say, Yeah, but you know what? Um, we we don't live in those times anywhere, it's like, but we do. The crimes just look different. But women are still being persecuted for being women and still being assaulted just for being women. And, you know, when I'm walking down the street, if I look a certain way, if I walk a certain way, if somebody's around who thinks they have rights or access to my body, they will take it. You know, and it it it it's it's and it even happens to men. And it actually happens more to men that we even know because majority of men won't report it. Because why? Because they're not safe being in their feminine, huh? Gee, I wonder. Even this whole thing about like how you're hearing online, like I've I've heard some people say this like this movement of like how men are falling behind and women are getting ahead. And it's like, well, maybe that's because men have not been able to access their emotional experience. Maybe that's because we need to do a better job as a society to create a safer environment for men to feel and heal a lot of the emotions that they're holding on to that keeps them angry at women. Maybe, right? Maybe the healing is on both sides of the aisle. Sorry, but like, you know, like, yes, women have had to heal a lot, and a lot of us are moving through the healing right now, and we're in the thick of it, and many of us have done most of the work, and some of us are just getting started. And it doesn't matter where you are on the journey, but the important thing is that it's not just our work to do, it's the work of humanity as a whole. We all need to heal and be more comfortable being in our feminine and create a safe environment for the feminine to thrive. Safety is key. So that's what we're gonna talk about next is, you know, when we created this feminist movement and you know, we started to lay down it, it wasn't about anger towards men. It was about creating equality among the sexes. It was about never again discriminating on the basis of sex, right? And creating a world where, whether man or woman, you had equal access to voting rights, equal access to um to career, to financial pay, to owning property, to having a bank account. Like these were the rights that we were fighting for as women, okay? We were fighting for our right to vote, our right to be heard, our right to have a job, to work, to enter the workforce, to go to school, um, to get a degree. You know, this is what feminist was about. Okay. Were there some angry women in there? Sure. Yeah, there were. There were there were a lot of angry women. There still are. But you know what? Here's the thing. As I said before in the last episode, you know, trauma needs safety to heal. So what happened, I think, when we created the safe container for the feminine for the feminine to be reborn, what we saw was just how fucking angry she was of all the oppression, the discrimination, the abuse, the persecution that that you know, women have experienced for centuries. And so a lot of women, what you saw was a mass, and you're still seeing it today, it's not done yet. Um, what you're seeing is this mass um purge, like this, this, this um generational purge of past wounds that we've been through in our lineage and past lifetimes, that is just literally being unleashed on the planet all at once. So, what you're actually seeing is angry feminist is actually an outpouring of the grief, of the rage, of the anger, of the pain, of you know, all of the oppression and the abuse that we've we've lived through again and again and again, again for centuries. And I can attest to this. I can attest to this. I literally like, and we'll talk about this in episode six, but um, you know, when the feminist movement, which was about creating equality within the government, within our schools, within our communities, within our um institutions, you know, that created that safe container for the feminist, the feminine, the feminine that was wounded, that was hurt, that was angry, that was full of rage, to be let out and to process all of that sort emotion. I'm my methods, if you've worked with me, you know my methods is, you know, emotional alchemy and emotional energetics. You know, we move through unprocessed pain and trauma that's stuck in the body, that's stuck in the energy field. We help you to move through that and we help you to process that in a safe way, in a nurturing way, in a way that doesn't feel uncomfortable or scary. And so that you could let it all out, let it be, and then move on and tapping into the emotion that's gonna help you create what you want in your life. This is essentially what's happening on a collective scale with the feminine, literally, like we're moving through and processing generations of emotions or trauma that we've been holding on to for centuries. I said centuries one too many times. But you know what I mean? Like, and so I I get so frustrated when people just go around and start labeling off all feminists as angry feminists. Like, we're not, and if we are, that's part of the healing too, and that's okay. And so, you know, ridiculing women for being angry about oppression that's still happening, for being angry about violence against women that still goes on today. Like, we're not out of the woods, you guys. Like, I'm so sick and tired of people talking about it, like it's something that happened in the past, and we need to get over it. Oppression still exists, systemic oppression still exists, violence against women still exists. This it's in the stats. One in three women will experience some sort of sexual or physical violence from a man, and most of them will be from an intimate partner. These are real statistics, you guys. Like, and I'm not saying this to fear-monger you, I'm saying this because we fucking still have work to do. So go ahead, call me an angry feminist if you so choose. By all means, go for it. I will continue to do this work, to speak up for women's rights, to speak up for fem for women's rights and for the rights of and the and the and the safe container for the feminine to be in her beauty and her and her power and in her creative, the creative life force energy that she was put on this earth to be, I will continue to fight for both of those. And I will continue to be a safe space for women who want to do this healing. And I will continue to be this voice of, you know, what we're just not gonna, like all the BS that we're just not gonna tolerate anymore. Because I'll tell you one thing, if the if life has taught me anything, is that a lot of these beliefs that teach us to doubt ourselves, that teach us to, and I've experienced this a lot in the spiritual community, you guys, not just about feminine and and feminine energetics and all that, like manifestation, emotional, like tapping into your emotional, uh, like emotional awareness. There's a lot of judgment out there, and there's a lot of ideologies that are keeping us this empowered. The idea that we can't tap into and fully feel our emotions, this idea that we have to always be positive, always be in love and light, that we always, you know, we always have to be in gratitude and joy in order to manifest good things. Bullshit, bullshit. The this thing that we always need to be able to forgive. And if we're not forgiving, then um, yeah, for you know what? Yeah, for forgiveness is great when you're ready. You can't force it because when you force it, you almost set yourself up to re-traumatize yourself, okay? Um, and this whole idea that you know being angry is bad, setting boundaries is bad. You're a difficult person. Um if you're a feminist, you're an angry woman who's gonna end up alone. Um, you know, a a lonely cat lady. Fine, buy me some cats, fuck off. Like, listen, we can love, and this is where this is where I think I want to leave this. We can absolutely be in unconditional love, and we can absolutely live with an open heart and still be angry. We can be in love and still call out bad behavior, we can be in love and be open-hearted and still be able to set healthy boundaries with people and say and be honest about what we will and won't tolerate from them. We can still be in love and an open heart and still just be able to discern who we give our time and our energy to and who we open ourselves up to and allow ourselves to be vulnerable. Both can coexist. We don't have to feel bad for being angry anymore. Angry is a very powerful emotion. It is a guide, it is a teacher, it is wisdom. We just need to learn how to work with it, right? I think the mistake that we've made with anger, all of us, men and women, is we've either suppressed it or projected it. So we've either like swallowed it and let it live inside of us somewhere, and and and you know, tried to pretend that it wasn't didn't exist and it wasn't there when it actually really was, and it was creating amuck in our lives energetically. Been there done that. Or we've projected it onto other people around it. We've taken it out on other people, we've we've spewed it in our relationships in our lives, create saying and doing very damaging, hurtful things. Been there done that too. What can I say? Um you know, but you know what happens when we actually learn to harness the power of moving through that and allowing it to just be present and to do its work because I'm telling you, every emotion leads to alchemy if you let it. We just need to lead to learn how to let it. Okay. Um, so I'm just gonna actually quickly take a peek of my notes here and see if there's anything that I've missed because there's so much I wanted to say today, and I I hope, I can only hope that I articulated that in a way that actually made sense. Because I realize like I said a lot in a very short period of time, we jumped back and forth, but you know, and I will say this, you know, to to the men, and I'm just seeing the notes right now, and I just I love this, you know. For one, well, not this part, but you know, for a woman who has been, like I said, assaulted, like physically assaulted, where I've been touched inappropriately or groped by somebody who, you know, did not have my permission to touch or grope me. From a woman who's been, you know, roofied, um, and you know, not in control of her faculties. And thank God she had some, you know, good people around her that were like watching out for her at the time. For a woman who has been inappropriately propositioned by the adults in the room when she was a child. Um, I can remember, actually, this is a funny story. Um, when I talk about feminine anger. So I think I was 11 years old at the time. And this friend of the family who everyone seemed to like, it's always the one that everyone loves, you know, it's always the one that everyone loves that is the most charismatic, that always makes women feel giddy. You know, it's always those, right? Um, who was like, I was 11 at the time. I think he was like, I don't know, 50, right? This older hokey man who would always look at me like I like I was like, I don't know, a steak dinner, you know, at 11. And it made me so uncomfortable the way he looked at me. Um and I can remember like, you know, being because he was like a friend of the family, and I can remember like every time, you know, the the the family was like distracted or doing things, he would always like be touching me under the table or looking at me or doing like obscene things with his face and his mouth. And I just wanted to, I want to vomit in my mouth still now when I think about it. Like it was that offensive to me. And I can remember, oh my god, one time we had gone to the beach, we had a we had a family beach day, and we were out there and we were swimming in the water, and um, you know, all of a sudden, like we're all out there, we're all swimming, we're all playing, and I was kind of I don't know why, but I was kind of like separate from everyone else. I think I was looking at something in the water, or I don't know. Anyway, but either way, I was kind of like my family was all like all over there, and I was kind of off in my own direction. And all of a sudden, I feel like something grabbed me under the water, and he literally like grabbed my thighs and started like stroking his hand upward. I kid you not, this big, beastly, like hulky man, like 50-year-old, big belly, probably at least like maybe like 5'11, maybe six feet. Big, huge man. And this little 11-year-old girl, he's underwater, like basically trying to like rope me and moving towards my crotch. I at this point have had it because nobody's believing me. Like, the I don't like the way this guy's touching me. And what did I do? Oh, did my masculine step up to the plate because that little 11-year-old girl, he was underwater, he had his head underwater. That little 11-year-old girl grabbed his head. Actually, grabbed him by the throat. Oh my god, I can't believe I did this. Grabbed him by the throat and started holding his head underwater because I was filled with so much rage and anger. And then I thank God my family was like close by and they like literally like pried me off of him. Um, but it took like it took like five or six people to pry me off of him and like get him to let him go. And my cousins were big dudes at the time, like they were pretty strong, and it it took them, it took five of them to like pry me off of this man, and so that he can kind of get up above water and breathe again. And let me tell you, he never fucking touched me again ever after that. Now, he wasn't the last person to make an attempt. That wasn't the last, you know, time I had to deal with, you know, people touching me inappropriately or uh, you know, inappropriate propositions or anything like that in the workplace and social environments or whatever. And, you know, there I had a long journey of experiences like that from the time that I was 11 years old till right up until, you know, my corporate job a few years ago, where, you know, it was it was evidently clear that, you know, uh somebody that I was working for had other interests in me other than just my work, right? And it created a very uncomfortable situation for me. Um, and so, you know, I mean, I say all this to say, you know, I had to, my, I literally had to step into my masculine in that moment because nobody was creating a safe space for me. And so I had to create that safe space for myself. And the reality is, is that, you know, even though I've done a lot of healing around this, and that's why I'm able to talk about this so lightheartedly. I'm I'm not I'm not in a position to talk about this in a lighthearted way if I hadn't done the work on a lot of these incidences that have happened to me in my life, um, you know, repeatedly. But, you know, the reality. Is we still live in a world that is unsafe for women. And so, you know, um, I still walk home with my keys clutched in my knuckles in case I have to like, you know, hit somebody. I still check the backseat of my car before I get into it. You know, um, I still pick up my phone and pretend to talk to somebody on the phone when I'm walking through a dark path or whatever, and I don't feel safe at night. And I see somebody around me, sometimes even in the daytime, if I see someone around me who I get like a weird vibe from, I'll pick up my phone and start pretending that I'm talking to somebody on the phone. Like I still have to do these things. And that's because we have not, we have failed to create a world that is safe for women. Um, we still have a lot of work to do. And, you know, calling us angry feminists for um, you know, screaming for our rights and setting our boundaries and and trying to create a better world, a safer world for women, a more equal world for women. It's like, dude, maybe you need to do some healing. You know, like maybe it's your turn to do some of the healing that you keep pushing on women, you know. That's just maybe a little bit, right? Um, because the reality is that, you know, we shouldn't have to be, we shouldn't have to put our keys in our knuckles or pick up our phone or you know, check our backseat of our car. Or the worst part is texting your friend to let them know you're going out on a blind date and this is where you're going, and this is the person's profile and their name and where you found them, just in case you happen to go missing the next day. You know what I mean? Like, I mean, these are these are really weird things. And again, even the whole um the the inequality in pay, the the fact that you know, so many of our rights are being taken away, depending on where you live as women, you know, I we still have work to do. We're not done. So if they're gonna call us angry feminists, fine. But the reality is, is we're not gonna feel bad for fighting for something that we as all humans should have access to. And it is actually our feminine that is begging for this. It is actually our feminine that is begging for the safe container so that she could fully relax and rest and be in her creative mastery, in her emotional mastery, right? Her her divine intelligence, her her magic. She wants this. So let's create it. We have to create a world that is safer for all of us, and that includes creating a world that is safer for men to be in their feminine energy because they haven't felt safe either. And I think you know, to say that this narrative that the key to healing the relationship and life and family is to put women back in the home and be submissive. I mean, I I that is that is how we keep society, not women, but society um in a disempowered state, men and women alike. Because the reality is that, like I said, we have so much creative power and energy as women, and there's so many things that we can do. Yes, we can birth amazing children and we can raise amazing families, but for many of us, you know, the path is very different. For me, that was a lot of that took a lot of healing. I wanted children, I've always wanted children, but it never happened for me. And for years I was bitter and resentful about this, but now I realize, you know what, life was just meant to take me down a different path. And I couldn't have gone down that path if I had children. And so, and there's so many women out there who want children so desperately, who can't have them. What are they like, do they do they not hold a place in society? Like, you know, like there's just so many things where we make, we try to make things black and white and they're not, you know, we're so much more than that. And we carry so much more power and wisdom and creation than that. And the more that we continue to oppress women and the feminine, the real feminine, not the feminine that, you know, we're being we're that is being shoved in our throats right now to serve a patriarchal agenda, but the real feminine, the real feminine power. And if you're, you know, if you want to harness some of those skills, you know, go back and check um the first part of the series where I talked about the nine sacred feminine superpowers that are literally gonna make you powerful and magnetic as fuck. I'm not even joking, um, within minutes of doing some of those practices. Okay. I I really believe that we're doing all of us an injustice by not, if we don't create a safe space for that to flourish in all of us. Um and it's not like again, it's not the it's not this, this, this picture that we're being fed by a patriarchal agenda that keeps us in a disempowered state, men and women. It's actually coming into into balance and harmonizing the masculine and feminine within each of us that makes us powerful and unstoppable. And they don't want you to know that. Because how would they control you if you did? They couldn't. So keep leaning in. The fact that they are getting more, the patriarchy is getting more aggressive, the fact that they're getting more offensive with how much the lengths that they're going to to push these ideologies onto us is proof that they are getting nervous. So do not stop. Do not stop. I don't care if they call you an angry feminist, a lonely cat lady. I don't care. Keep going. Okay. Yes, there are fucking amazing men out there who are fully capable of being in their hearts and expressing emotion and being in their feeling in their emotional body and connecting on such a deep level. And then there are others who aren't. And that's fine because what we're doing is creating a safe world for the feminine to thrive in men and women and non-binary and all people in general. It's time that we let the feminine out of the box. It's time that we let Pandora out of the box so that she can work some magic in this world because the world needs magic. And that only starts when we start to balance those energies within ourselves. So use your masculine, but also use and harness the power of your feminine and try to use both these sides of you. So the feminine is, you know, the, and we'll talk more about this. The feminine is, you know, the feeling, the intuition, um, the emotional, the creative energy, and then the masculine is the physical, the thought, the logic, the strategy, right? The hunter, the gatherer, right? So use both. Use both to your advantage. Be comfortable being in both. That is when you tap into your power. And as you start to do that, more and more people like we're literally like we're creating like a like like a what's it called? Um, we're creating a movement that starts with each and every one of us individually. We can't teach people how to be, I mean, we can. We can share what we're doing and how we're learning, like I'm doing with you guys, but it's up to you if you want to follow what I'm doing. I'm just over here trying to like balance these energies within me, right? And I'm sharing with you how I'm doing it and the nine practices I shared last week, totally life-changing for me. So have a look at those. The link is in the show notes. Um, you can sign up to get the entire playlist, the journal prompts, and the affirmations. And I will see you guys here next week with or next, no, not next week, later this week. Because I think this is this is going live on Monday. So there'll be another episode out on Thursday. That is all for now, you guys. Until next time, massive love.

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