These two thing can coexist: I’m enough and I’m allowed to want more
I’ve been sitting with this tension for a while now.
This idea that women need to either fully accept themselves or work to grow as if those two things can’t exist in the same breath.
But what if they can?
What if the most powerful kind of growth isn’t born from dissatisfaction…but from love?
What if you could sit at a table, be exactly who you are; messy, magnificent, still figuring things out and feel like you are enough…right now. And also walk away knowing that if something inside you is whispering, “I want more,” that desire is not betrayal. It’s permission.
When I created The Savor Society, my vision wasn’t just to gather women, it was to create a space where we could lay down the pressure, the performance, the proving… and just be.
To feel like we belong before we bloom and to be reminded that we’re not broken projects, we’re whole people in process.
We need places where we don’t have to hustle for worthiness. We need rooms where we can breathe again. We need reminders that growth doesn’t mean fixing it means unfolding.
What I Want You to Know
You are allowed to want more without shaming where you are now. You’re allowed to grow from a place of self-trust, not self-rejection.
You’re allowed to be enough and evolving at the same time.
The two aren’t opposites. They are dance partners. And when held together, they create something sacred:
A woman who knows her worth and still chooses to rise.
Inside The Savor Society
That’s the heart of what we’re building here. In our gatherings, we celebrate the stories women often hide, the in-process, the still-working-on-it, the quietly-brave. We laugh, cry, reflect, and nourish ourselves in more ways than one. There’s no pressure to be “healed,” only the invitation to be honest.
Every event is a reminder that you can savor the now and stretch toward the next. That your presence is enough and your path is yours to choose.
If this resonates and you’ve been craving a space like this, there’s a seat for you.
Come as you are and leave reminded of who you’ve always been.