JournalDivine Feminine · 2024

Your Intention Is Your Jewelry: Reclaiming the True Divine Feminine

The spiritual wellness market hit $2.16 billion in 2024. By 2033, it's projected to reach $7.31 billion.

That's a lot of rose quartz.

I'm watching something unsettling happen in real time. The divine feminine—a concept rooted in generative power, creative force, and embodied wisdom—has been repackaged as a shopping list. Buy the right crystals. Light the right candles. Wear the right moon phase jewelry. Follow the right influencers.

And somehow, you'll unlock your divine feminine energy.

But here's what I've realized: the divine feminine doesn't live in your jewelry box. It lives in your intentions.

When Spirituality Became Another Category on Amazon

I first noticed something was off when I saw a $200 "goddess activation kit" advertised to me. Inside: sage, a crystal, a journal, and a meditation guide. The promise? Instant connection to your divine feminine power.

The packaging was beautiful. The marketing was compelling. The message was clear: you need to purchase your way to enlightenment.

This is what Buddhist meditation master Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche called spiritual materialism—using spiritual concepts and tools to reinforce the ego. We're not becoming more enlightened. We're becoming more enchained.

What was once sacred has become merchandise.

What the Divine Feminine Actually Is

When I think about the divine feminine, the first thing that comes to mind is not softness.

It's creative power.

Not delicacy—but generative force. The intelligence that births stars, ecosystems, language, children, civilizations. The capacity to hold paradox: tenderness and ferocity, surrender and leadership, intuition and precision.

The divine feminine is embodied aliveness.

The ocean is feminine. So is a volcano.

But somewhere along the way, we reduced it to aesthetic softness. Flowy dresses, moon rituals, pink filters. None of these are inherently wrong. But the divine feminine is not a mood board. It's a principle of life force.

The Four Big Misunderstandings

1. Confusing it with passivity

The divine feminine is not waiting to be chosen. It creates. It initiates. It builds. It destroys when necessary. It is cyclic, not weak.

2. Reducing it to aesthetic performance

The wellness industry profits from this confusion. It sells you the costume of spirituality while keeping you from the substance. Real spiritual practice moves you away from consumption. The commercialized version does the opposite.

3. Separating it from structure and discipline

True feminine energy is not chaotic emotion. It has rhythm. It has boundaries. It knows when to nourish and when to say no. It is embodied—not abstract.

4. Detaching it from responsibility

The mature divine feminine does not avoid accountability. She creates and sustains ecosystems. She understands consequence.

The Consumerism Paradox

Here's what makes this commercialization particularly insidious: it promises connection while delivering disconnection.

You buy the meditation cushion, but you don't meditate.

You purchase the oracle deck, but you don't trust your own intuition.

You collect the tools, but you don't do the work.

Consumer spirituality teaches that the Universe is infinite, so you "deserve" endless manifestation. It encourages relentless positivity while shunning uncomfortable emotions like rage and grief as "low-vibe."

But those emotions serve as portals to connect with human suffering. They're part of the whole picture.

Meanwhile, intention costs nothing.

What Intention Actually Means

Intention is not a buzzword you caption on Instagram.

It's the quality of attention you bring to your choices.

It's the gap between impulse and action where you pause and ask: "Does this align with who I'm becoming?"

Intention is:

  • Choosing to have the difficult conversation instead of avoiding it
  • Setting a boundary even when it feels uncomfortable
  • Creating something meaningful even when no one's watching
  • Saying no to what drains you to say yes to what sustains you
  • Showing up consistently for what matters

Intention is invisible. It leaves no aesthetic trace. You can't photograph it for social media.

But you can feel it in a room when someone enters who's done their inner work.

Reclaiming the Sacred from the Sale

I'm not saying you should throw away your crystals or stop lighting candles.

I'm saying the object is not the practice.

The divine feminine is not something you activate through a purchase. It's something you embody through integrity. When embodied, it does not perform. It radiates.

Beyond Gender, Into Wholeness

This framework applies to everyone, regardless of gender.

The divine feminine is not about women. It's a polarity within all beings. It's the receptive intelligence that allows creation to emerge. The intuition that becomes form. The capacity to hold complexity without needing to resolve it immediately.

Men embody it when they create space for vulnerability.

Women embody it when they trust their knowing.

Everyone embodies it when they choose presence over performance.

The Path Forward

I'm building a different framework for measuring growth.

Not by what I own, but by what I embody.

Not by how I appear, but by how I show up.

Not by what I signal, but by what I sustain.

The wellness industry will keep selling you solutions. That's what it does. But the divine feminine was never a problem that needed solving.

It's a power that needs remembering.

And that remembering happens in the quiet moments between purchases. In the space where you stop consuming and start creating. In the breath where you stop performing and start being.

Your intention is your jewelry.
Wear it well.