
Monday, July 21, 2014
Sacred Pregnancy 8 week session
Kandy Naylor will be teaching the 8-week Pregnancy Journey class beginning September 3. Come circle and connect with other mothers on their pregnancy journey. This is the inaugural Sacred Pregnancy Scottsdale session! It will be for donation toward the opening of Sacred Space in Scottsdale. The classes will include snacks, crafts, sharing, and honoring which will include henna, salt scrub, massage, restorative yoga, and lots of love and fun! Art supplies included. Contact Kandy at kandy@mamalovetree.com for more information and exact location. Update: Now located in Bellingham, WA - Contact Kandy Naylor kandy@mamalovetree.com or 360-990-4142
Thursday, July 17, 2014
ABOUT
Kandy Naylor studied Humanities, Art History, and Cultural Studies at Northern Arizona University. While in college, she found herself taking a yoga course and soaking it all in. She is now a certified yoga instructor. During her own pregnancies, she felt a deeper and deeper calling to the role of birth worker. She is now a birth doula, certified breastfeeding counselor, placenta crafter and will further her yoga teaching skills with Sacred Yoga prenatal teacher training in November 2014.
In 2015, she will be opening a Sacred Space in Phoenix, AZ offering prenatal yoga, postpartum yoga, Sacred Pregnancy classes, various workshops, massage, and postpartum services including the gorgeous Bengkung Belly Bind.
As she continues to expand her Sacred Pregnancy offerings, and support women during fertility, pregnancy, birth, and postpartum, she can also be found around her home crafting mei tai baby wraps, making malas, or preparing healthy, nourishing meals to feed her family.
Welcome to Sacred Whisper Bellingham! We are a tiny fraction of the international Sacred Movement founded by Anni Daulter. This newsletter will include information about fertility, pregnancy, birth, postpartum, nourishing foods, and motherhood. We wish to provide current information and resources with the primary objective being to make changes in how we, as a culture, think about birth and postpartum as it relates to the process and to the women it affects.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)