Many years ago, I stopped seeing my business as a business.
I know that sounds strange, especially in a world that constantly talks about strategy, algorithms, growth, funnels, and conversion rates. While those things can certainly have their place, they never fully captured how I felt about the work I was here to do.
Instead, I began to see my business as a temple. And myself as the priestess of that temple.
That simple shift changed everything.
Rather than asking, “How do I get more people to buy?” I started asking, “How do I serve the people who enter this space?” Rather than focusing on convincing, persuading, or chasing, I focused on tending the temple.
The energy became completely different.
Opening the Temple Door
Every morning, I imagine opening the doors of my temple.
Some people walk past without noticing it. Some glance inside and keep walking. Some become curious and return another day. And some step inside and immediately know they have found something they have been searching for.
The beautiful thing is that none of those responses are my responsibility. My responsibility is simply to open the door. To keep showing up, tending the space, sharing what I have been called to share, and making the temple available.
What other people choose to do with that invitation belongs to them. That is their free will. That is their journey. That is their decision.
The Priestess Does Not Chase
One of the most liberating lessons I have learned on the priestess path is that service and force are not the same thing.
Many of us have been conditioned to believe that if we want something badly enough, we must push harder. Work harder. Convince more people. Become more persuasive.
Yet the energy of the priestess is different.
The priestess understands that she cannot force someone into the temple. She cannot make someone receive the medicine, say yes to the journey, or decide they are ready for something their soul is not yet open to.
What she can do is create a beautiful, clear, welcoming space and trust that those who are meant to enter will find their way there.
This does not mean doing nothing. Far from it. The priestess still opens the doors. She still lights the candles, tends the altar, prepares the space, and shares the invitation. But she does not carry responsibility for another person’s choice.
Service Requires Visibility
This is where many spiritual entrepreneurs become stuck.
They want to serve. They want to help. They want to share their gifts. Yet they are uncomfortable being seen.
The irony is that service requires visibility. Not because visibility is the goal, but because people cannot enter a temple they do not know exists.
If you have a healing gift, people need to know you are there. If you have wisdom to share, people need the opportunity to hear it. If you have created something that could genuinely help another person, they need a way to find it.
Visibility is not about ego. It is about accessibility. It is allowing the people who are looking for your work to actually discover it.
A hidden temple may be beautiful, but very few people will ever experience what it holds.
Success Looks Different From This Perspective
When you see your business as a temple, success begins to look different.
Success is no longer measured solely by numbers. It is measured by devotion. Did I open the doors today? Did I share what felt true? Did I honor the gifts I have been given? Did I serve with integrity and show up with love?
Of course practical results still matter. A temple still requires resources. A business still requires income. But those things become part of a larger picture rather than the entire picture.
The focus shifts from transaction to stewardship. From pressure to devotion. From chasing to serving. From convincing to inviting.
The Temple You Are Here to Build
You do not need a spiritual business to understand this.
Your temple may be your coaching practice, your healing work, your writing, your art, your community, or even your home and family. The question is not what form your temple takes. The question is whether you are willing to tend it.
Because every priestess is a keeper of something. A vision. A gift. A message. A body of work. A space that only she can create.
And perhaps the invitation is not to build a bigger temple. Perhaps the invitation is simply to open the door.
Ready to Be Seen?
If this way of viewing your work resonates with you, perhaps the question is not whether your temple exists. Perhaps the question is whether you’re allowing people to find it.
Many women know they have gifts to share — wisdom, healing, creativity, a message that could support others. Yet they remain hidden. Not because they lack value, but because visibility can feel vulnerable.
What if being seen wasn’t about seeking attention? What if it was simply about allowing the people who need your work to find you?
Chosen was created for the woman who is ready to stop hiding her gifts and start sharing them with greater confidence, clarity, and trust. Not by becoming someone else. Not by forcing herself to be louder. But by allowing more of who she already is to be seen.
Because your calling is not helped by remaining invisible.
The temple was never meant to stay hidden.
Step into CHOSEN here

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