The Way Home Begins with Being Human
Not perfect.
Not healed.
Not enlightened.
Human.
For much of my life, I was doing what many of us do.
Showing up.
Meeting responsibilities.
Building a career.
Taking care of the people I loved.
From the outside, life looked fine.
Yet beneath the surface were questions that quietly followed me:
Is there more to life than accomplishing and achieving?
Why do I still feel disconnected from myself even when things are going well?
What happens when the roles I’ve identified with no longer define me?
Those questions led me on a journey that began in 2010 and continues today.
Over the years, I have explored mindfulness, meditation, yoga, self-inquiry, contemplative traditions, and the wisdom of many teachers and paths.
Each offered something valuable.
Yet the most profound lessons did not come from techniques or teachings.
They came from moments of vulnerability.
Moments when life invited me to stop pretending.
Moments when I could no longer solve everything with effort.
Moments when I had to meet myself exactly as I was.
Again and again, I discovered something simple:
The peace I was searching for was not somewhere else.
It was hidden beneath layers of striving, fear, self-judgment, and the belief that I needed to become someone different.
Awareness did not ask me to improve myself.
It asked me to notice myself.
Compassion did not ask me to fix myself.
It asked me to welcome myself.
And vulnerability became a doorway home.
108Village was born from that understanding.
This is not a place about perfection.
It is not a place about having all the answers.
It is a place for honest exploration.
A place where mindfulness becomes something we live rather than something we practice only on a meditation cushion.
A place where awareness meets everyday life.
A place where we can bring our whole selves—the confident parts, the uncertain parts, the joyful parts, and the wounded parts—and discover that all of them belong.
Because there is no single path home.
There are infinite ways to arrive home to yourself.
You May Feel At Home Here If…
You have spent years taking care of others and are beginning to wonder what it means to care for yourself.
You are navigating a transition—midlife, menopause, career change, an empty nest, loss, uncertainty, or a quiet longing for something deeper.
You are tired of constantly trying to improve yourself and are curious about what self-acceptance might feel like.
You have explored personal growth, spirituality, mindfulness, or meditation but still find yourself asking deeper questions.
You value authenticity more than perfection.
You sense that beneath all the roles you play, there is something essential waiting to be remembered.
If any of this resonates, welcome.
You do not need to arrive as a finished version of yourself.
You only need a willingness to begin exactly where you are.
