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Archetypes and your vastness

Childhood stereotyping is the type that goes deep into your limbic system and is hard to shake off. Some little girls are taught subliminally that they have to be pleasing and pretty to be loveable, but my designated role within my family as a child was as ‘the smart one’. I excelled in school, got straight As, skipped grades, broke records on standardized testing. I was socially awkward, chubby, sloppy, and a rhythmless dancer, but that was okay because… Joanna’s the mad genius, the smart one.

via GIPHY

In retrospect, the 8-year-old math whiz turning into the 26-year-old law student trembling with panic attacks at the thought of not acing her property law exam was eminently predictable. And indeed, for roughly the first 30 years of life I lived out that role exactly as you’d expect of someone who believed fundamentally that her ability to be loved hinged on her ability to be the academic superstar.

I’m not sure if it was my Saturn Return, or the relief of finally finishing law school and being sent on a prestigious scholarship year in the U.K. where it was made clear to me that I was not expected to do much substantive work, but when I turned 30 I suddenly discovered a universe of myself that had henceforth gone sacrificed under the freight train of perfectionism.

I began seriously practicing classical Kundalini Yoga, yes, but I also found spare energy for writing creative long-form pieces, dating and sensuality in a completely different realm of pleasure, and honestly, just enjoyment of my life.

I had been letting my Wounded Child projection— the painful lessons every child integrates about what she needs to do to get love and survive— direct all of my vitality and focus.

And in so doing, I was suppressing the spectrum of possibilities that were longing to find expression through me: as a Mystic, a Teacher, an Empress, Witch, Scholar, and Alchemist (to name a few of my primary personal archetypes)

Working with these archetypes has been deeply transformative for me.

Have you ever felt a lingering sense that the way your life has splayed out— the work you do, the people you spend time with, the way you are- somehow doesn’t entirely allow for a robust expression of your sense of your own potential and true essence?

And you have some sense of what greater fulfillment and possibilities might lie on the other side, but few real-life examples of a roadmap of how to allow them to unfold in your life.

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To understand what archetypes are, two thinkers’ core insights suffice.

  • First, Plato’s theory of the forms, the notion that perfect prototypes exist in the universe and everything tactile one interacts with in the 5D world is cognizable insofar as it correlates to the prototype. For example: contemplating the idea of a perfect triangle, we might take pen to paper and attempt to draw one, but it would be an imperfect representation of the Form of triangle.
  • The Swiss analyst Carl Jung brought the concept of Forms down into deep human behaviour and psychology with his theory of archetypes. Archetypes are like prototypes for the human experience. They are universal human patterns and symbols which derive from the collective unconscious: they pop up in myths from Polynesia to Japan, fairytales, and dreams.
  • Joseph Campbell, in turn, expanded Jung’s foundational archetypes into the realms of myth, identifying the Hero’s Journey, which provides the narrative outline for more or less every popular film or book. Campbell found that similar myths, stories, and characters popped up across cultures and history, across civilizations that could not have known about what another. His explanation for this was Jung’s ‘collective unconscious’.
  • And later, the spiritual teacher Caroline Myss taught her students how to identify their soul’s ‘sacred contracts‘ by dialling into their archetypes.

Studying archetypes is practical and useful in at least three ways:

1) It helps us to understand one another, as well as ourselves.

Ever said someone is “such a Scorpio” or “such a diva”? That’s your mind mapping particular personae or personality patterns onto archetypes. Expanding our awareness of the archetypes helps us to make sense of the humans we interact with by giving us an overall blueprint.

As human beings, we love patterns—they bring order to our lives. We are continually scanning our world for patterns, particularly in people, because we know intuitively that if we understand someone’s behavior patterns, we understand how she relates to herself, to her life, and to us.

via GIPHY

A classic contemporary Queen archetype.

(BTW, it’s no surprise to me that astrology is enjoying a renaissance among millennials, as it is basically a cosmic gallery of archetypes).

All of our relationships are organized by archetypal patterns: teacher and student, supervisor and employee, parent and child, lovers, co-conspirators, adversaries.

2) It lends context and structures to our life transitions.

Besides archetypes, we all undergo archetypal journeys. The two most commonly known are the Hero’s Journey— variations of which explain the narrative structure of virtually every Hollywood film, and likewise is deeply influential in consumer marketing. Our protagonist sets out on her quest, comes up against resistance or barriers, meets a sage (like Obi-Wan) who guides her, and breaks through to success.

More specific to female-identifying people is the maiden to mother to crone journey, of moving from being a young woman in full bloom with more desires than obligations, to a grown woman with dependents, to a woman in full maturity who has come back out into her freedom and, according to the archetype, liberated herself particularly from the weight of others’ expectations.

3) It gives us a rooted and sustainable way of stretching into our infinity and owning our prismatic nature.

You are so much more than you think you are. Your life is much deeper and broader than you conceive it to be here. Our lives are but a fractional inkling of the massive genius and depth that is truly within us. As modern secular people, we need context to begin to live in terms of that depth, honouring that depth. Studying archetypes and beginning to understand ourselves in terms of millennia of human experience is very helpful.

So how to get started with relating to my archetypes?

There are infinite archetypes, and I believe that we all contain the seeds of all of them, but likely there are only 8-12 archetypes that are central to your particularly incarnational story. In order to identify them, I’d suggest for starters…

  • Reading through this gallery of archetypes by Caroline Myss and noting which archetypes intuitively pull you in, and
  • Journalling on the following questions:
    • Who were my personal superheroes growing up?
    • If I had one week left to live, what would I want the world to know and why?
    • What are my non-negotiable values?

One of my core beliefs is that this modern, secular world is in deep need of re-enchantment. We are fritzed out on technology, consumerism, and information, and shrivelled away yearning for depth, connection, and a sense of transcendence.

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Microcosms, macrocosms, and manifesting change.

For the longest time, despite being a good empowered feminist and yogi, I fundamentally believed myself to be a victim of circumstance.

That’s the cold hard truth of it. Although I knew all the techniques to ease stress, boost my mood and health, I still fundamentally believed the things that my heart truly longed for— a more fulfilling career, more money, true love— were matters of chance and out of my control.

Here’s what I had to learn and graft onto my lived bodily experience to break me out of that self-undermining spell, that so much of capitalism, consumerism, and patriarchy is built upon…

We live in a fractal universe.

Say what?

Fractals are the exquisite structures produced by nature. Some are visible to the human eye (like the patterning on a perfectly symmetrical leaf), but some of my favourites are not, like this enchanting Mandelbrot fractal:

Notice how as the image zooms in closer and closer, the pattern remains identical as it iterates?

All of nature— clouds,  trees, and our very human selves – is subject to the same laws in this fractal universe. The shape of a fractal can be completely captured by a small list of mathematical mappings that describe exactly how the smaller copies are arranged to form the whole fractal.

Cool, but what does that mean for us living, breathing, humans?

A fragment contains the entire pattern which structures the whole. So when you change one part of the fractal— say, your individual psyche, habit, or energy, you simultaneously change the whole.

One of my favourite places to observe this is in in the applied yogic science of Kundalini Yoga.

In Kundalini Yoga, we use breath, sound, mantra, and shapes (yoga asanas) to shift how your energy is collected and organized, purify the subconscious, and enhance certain energetic patterns for specific results. The result is that not just you, but your whole universe is altered.

I know a woman who started practicing Kirtan Kriya, a fundamental meditation of Kundalini Yoga, for 31 minutes a day. The meditation involves chanting the sounds Sa (life), Ta (death), Na (infinity), Ma (rebirth), and it’s classically given for creativity and clearing the subconscious.

Now, sure, the woman experienced greatly enhanced creative flow. Kirtan Kriya works— UCLA has studied it extensively

What was way more interesting to me, though was that her husband spontaneously dropped 20 pounds of extra weight he’d been trying to lose for years to no avail. You see, when she shifted her magnetic field by using the meditation, her entire orbit— including her husband- also had to change to match her vibration.

The universe likes to speak in the language of rhymes and synchronicities.

So what can you do if you want to change something in your external reality? Maybe you find yourself in the rut of singleness (which, to be clear, isn’t always a rut but can be exhilarating), and wish to attract a mate? 

Well, there’s something in your fractal design that is projecting a frequency of aloneness, even if your conscious desire is to mate. If you wanted to shift that, I’d perhaps suggest..

-Practicing Breathwork to clear out stagnant energy and give you deeper awareness of deeper layers of consciousness,

-Practicing at least 3 minutes of Sat Kriya a day to re-pattern energy in your lower chakras relating to sexuality, security, and confidence, and

-Chanting the Ajai Alai mantra for the Radiant Body, so you can begin to magnetize the people and circumstances that serve your soul’s destiny

(We could run a similar analysis for being broke, or lost about your life’s purpose, or any really lingering pattern.)

But if none of that really is your bag, here’s all you need to get (like REALLY get, in your bones and your subconscious mind and the first voice in your head when you wake up):

You contain the entire universe.

Reality is not happening to you, it’s taking its cue from you.

Once you really own the self-sovereignty that is your human birthright, life becomes a delightful game of polarities as you maneuver through your exquisite part in this fractal universe.

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The Three Essential Components to a Daily Kundalini Yoga Sadhana

There’s good news and bad news about developing a daily sadhana.


The good news? Daily practice really will change your life, and pretty quickly, even if it’s a short practice. When I first committed to sadhana, I was working an incredibly stressful and time-chained job as a criminal defence lawyer, and most days all I could manage was 3 minutes of Aerobic Capacity and Efficiency or Sitali Pranayama (I still practice both frequently!). And it worked– some days, all I could manage would be to sneak into the office gym change room and do a quick 3-minute practice, and I was a new woman once I returned to my desk.

But a full-spectrum sadhana, of the kind recommended in the Kundalini Yoga practice, really will repair your metabolism, strengthen your nerves, balance your hormones, stimulate your lymphatic system, de-age your body, and set you projection in the direction of your highest destiny.

Yup! As I look back on my life over the years, there has been a quantum up levelling in all areas of my life since I got serious about my practice, in all arenas– money, love, creativity, health, clarity. To be clear, that does not mean that there haven’t been ebbs and flows and low points– but I kept practicing through them, and was able always to hold a perspective of clarity and dignity and transmute conflicts.

The bad news? Let’s go back to that wise adage from Alcoholics Anonymous: it only works if you work it. Yup, sadhana is no quick fix, and definitionally it only works if you do it every single day. Not almost every day. Not four days a week. Sadhana is not a temporary fix. It’s not like “yoga three days a week, CrossFit twice a week, Pilates once a week.”


Sadhana is a daily, long-term relationship with yourself. 

Sadhana sends a vibrational command out from your personal energy field into the quantum field, and that command needs to be consistent. As an added benefit, having the integrity to sustain a daily practice builds a firmament of trust in your psyche. You know you’ll show up for yourself, even if you don’t feel like it.  That baseline of self-trust broadcasts from your aura, and others pick up on it without you saying a word. They want to hire you, invest in you, date you. 


So let’s get into the nitty-gritty of it all, shall we? Here’s what an ideal sadhana contains.

(And no, you don’t have to do Sadhana at 4am. It’s true that the 2.5 hours before sunrise are traditionally the most potent time to practice, but please don’t worry about this if it’s not sustainable for you. I practice around 6am most days).

1. Pranayama / Breathwork

Well…  obviously I was going to put this first! But a good pranayama practice packs the biggest punch: it will clean your blood, boost your metabolism, anchor your mind, enhance your energy and circulation. A few of my favourites:

Meditation to Brighten Your Radiance (wow, this one sends me out into outer space every time!)

Sitali Pranayam (supercooling and liver cleansing)

Ego Eradicator (the OG, an ‘aura quick fix’)


2. Yoga Set / Kriya

Kundalini Yoga Kriyas are unique in that they work on all Ten Bodies (blog post on those coming soon!) simultaneously, so you get a very holistic physical experience. My experience is that for true, real-life transformation, it’s necessary to do a daily physical yoga set rather than just meditate because energetic imprints of old thought forms leave a residue. Think of it like a soiled washing machine drum– it might clean your clothes a bit, but eventually, the drum is going to re-stain your clothes. Imprints in the aura, arcline, or physical body work in much the same way. You might clear your psyche out some with meditation, but you need to purify on a physical, cellular level for permanent vibrational shifts.

Luckily, there are incredibly effective KY sets that you can finish in under 10 minutes. My favourites:

Master Gland Set #1 (DESERT ISLAND KRIYA. One woman I know dropped fifteen pounds in a year just from doing this set every day, not changing anything else. The meditation at the end is optional.)

Kriya to Make You Enchantingly Beautiful

Adjust the Heat in the Body for Improved Digestion and Weight Loss (The only kriya I know of that mentions weight loss, and actually super gentle and meditative.)

Strengthening the Aura

Nervous System Overhaul (I make everyone I know do this set. Strong nerves give you the ability to hold more of everything you want- love, prosperity, energy).


Don’t have ten minutes? No problem. Just do three minutes of cat-cow, which stimulates collagen, awakens the spine and resets the glandular system.

Teaching cat-cow to our group of Radiant Beauty women at Lotus Yoga Centre


3. Meditation / Mantra

After your energy is buzzed up from pranayama, your ten bodies are balanced, and chakras are online from your yoga set, it’s time to meditate. I currently practice several forms of meditation– I’ve practiced Transcendental Meditation (TM) daily since learning it two years ago, I practice Breathwork, and of course, I chant Kundalini Yoga mantras. TM gives me spaciousness of mind and makes my brain feel like it’s had a bath. Breathwork deeply soothes my nervous system and gives me an organic high and access to different dimensions of consciousness. And mantras stimulate the meridians on the roof of the mouth in specific patterns and align me with my highest destiny track vibrationally. 

One of the cool things that initially drew me to Kundalini Yoga as a technology and what I’ll recommend in choosing a meditation is that this tradition has a meditation for every granular goal under the sun. Meditation to Prevent Aging? Check. Meditation to Manifest Money? Check. Meditation to Heal Ancestral Karma? We’ve got an app for that! (And to be clear, I have practiced all of these meditations for at least 40 days, and all of them really do deliver the specified results).

So really, just pick any meditation you’re drawn to, because you will be inherently motivated to practice it every day.

Because the truth is, all of the Kundalini meditations will eventually get you to the same destination- healthy, happy, purified of low-vibrational thought forms, prosperous– but some are a bit more direct routes.

And if you don’t know where to start, consider one of these three fundamental meditations that you honestly can’t go wrong with:

Kirtan Kriya (this one has been extensively studied for its neuroprotective effects by UCLA, but honestly, its effects could fill libraries..)

Sodarshan Chakra Kriya (I always have crazy dreams when I practice this one)

Sat Kriya (instant magnetism + confidence booster)

And that’s it! Here are a few suggestions of “model Sadhanas” based on how much time you have. Remember, 10 minutes 7 days a week is better than 2 hours twice a week! If even setting aside ten minutes feels daunting to you, do three minutes. You’ll start to create an inner spaciousness and rhythm even in three minutes, and plant the seed for a more fulsome practice when you are ready.


1. The Minimalist Sadhana

Fists of Anger (3 minutes)

Meditation for Addiction (3 minutes)

Cat-Cow (3 minutes)


2. Radiance and Beauty Practice

Meditation to Brighten Your Radiance (3 minutes)

Cat-Cow (3 minutes)

Kriya to Make You Enchantingly Beautiful (15 minutes)

Sat Kriya (11 minutes)


3. Full-Spectrum Classical Practice

Sitali Pranayama (3 minutes)

Cat-Cow (3 minutes)

Kriya for Elevation (25-30 minutes)

Kirtan Kriya (11 minutes)


4. Megawatt Prosperity Practice

Meditation to Brighten Your Radiance (3 minutes)

Cat-Cow (3 minutes)

Kriya for Green Energy and Opportunity (40 minutes)

Gyan Chakra Kriya (11 minutes)

… you get the idea! Happy practicing.

In the meantime, Keep Up and You’ll Be Kept Up! Sat nam.