The Andes Taught Me About the Divine Feminine — And It’s Not What You Think

I just came back from twenty days trekking through the Andes Mountains of Argentina — what many now recognize as the newly shifted heart center of Earth’s Kundalini energy — and I need to tell you something.

What I felt there completely changed how I understand the divine feminine.

And it wasn’t what I expected.

For years, we’ve been taught that the divine feminine is soft. Gentle. Nurturing. Emotional. Receptive. Compassionate.

And yes — those qualities exist.

But what I encountered in the Andes was something else entirely.

It wasn’t soft.
It wasn’t passive.
It wasn’t comforting.

It was sovereign.
Ancient.
Self-contained.
Unapologetic.

There’s something about high altitude that strips you down. When you’re trekking for days above 12,000 feet, your nervous system recalibrates. Your mind quiets. Your body becomes honest. You can’t fake strength up there. You can’t pretend you’re grounded if you’re not.

The mountain doesn’t respond to ego. It doesn’t respond to ambition. It doesn’t care what you want.

And that was the first lesson.

This wasn’t about conquering a peak. It was about asking permission.

Every day, I felt into the energy of the land. Not metaphorically — literally. There was a presence. A consciousness. Something mineral and intelligent. The Andes do not feel like a mother who comforts. They feel like an elder who watches.

There’s no emotional charge. No drama. No need. Just power in stillness.

And when summit night came, everything shifted.

We began the ascent in darkness. Headlamps cutting through cold air. Hours of silence. Breath measured. Step by step. I felt strong. Clear. Capable.

But somewhere along the climb, the energy changed.

The wind picked up. The temperature dropped. The sky thickened.

And it became obvious — this was not alignment.

There’s a difference between challenge and resistance. A difference between initiation and warning. And that night, it was a warning.

A violent storm rolled in. Fast. Unforgiving.

The mountain was done.

And here’s the part that surprised me most:

Turning back didn’t feel like failure.

It felt like clarity.

It felt powerful.

There was no emotional negotiation. No shame. No disappointment. Just a knowing.

The feminine I felt in that moment was not nurturing me toward success.