Rachel Jackson

Rachel Jackson rachel-jackson.com
Soul Mapping
Working with the Ancestors
Chakra Diagnosis
Wise Woman Mentorship

A body will not reveal its secrets to an absentee owner . How many books have been written about how our bodies keep the...
10/06/2026

A body will not reveal its secrets to an absentee owner .
How many books have been written about how our bodies keep the score? But more than keeping our past locked into place and how others treated us, our bodies also keep the score of how we personally treat our own bodies .

Every time you listen to your body, your body responds. Every time you ignore your body, your body remembers.
Your body keeps a running tab on whether you have its back or not.
Whether you will protect it, guard it, listen when it screams , and say no when it matters the most.
Do we respect our bodies enough to have the hard conversations or do we treat our bodies as nothing more than a dumping ground for our repressed desires and anger?
Our bodies know when we refuse to safeguard it, they know the score, and thus they know when we can’t be trusted.

Why would anybody reveal their most intimate information to someone who doesn’t take them seriously? Our bodies treat us the same.
Our body discerns whether we as guardians are worthy of its treasures.
Our bodies know whether we are ready to receive its deepest wisdom or not.
No Body will reveal its inner mysteries to someone it can’t trust. No Body will reveal its divine guidance to a lacklustre custodian.
What is inherently sacred about the body has to be protected, even from ourselves.

If we can not establish a loving, trusting relationship with our own body, how we we will ever experience why Love became Human?
If bodies are so dispensable, what’s the point of incarnating?

People keep searching for the key, the answer, the mystery and meaning to Life and refuse to listen to the custom built answer they were born into.

Spaces remain on my upcoming workshop:
The Moon & Mother
June 13, 2026
Online on zoom.
10 am Irish time
3 hours.

10/06/2026
05/06/2026

The engraving reveals one of alchemy’s deepest mysteries: that the path to the sun begins in the dragon. The dark creature emerging from the rocky earth embodies the primal forces of instinct, desire and untapped potential hidden within the depths of the soul. Yet from this same source rises the serpent, not as a symbol of corruption, but as the living current of transformation winding upward through the sphere of perfected nature, represented by the pentagram. The flowering plant that blossoms from its ascent signifies the birth of a new consciousness, a soul that has turned its lower nature into wisdom rather than repression. Above it all shines the radiant sun, not merely as a heavenly body but as the image of ultimate illumination, the divine center toward which every stage of the Great Work is directed. The image teaches a profound truth: enlightenment is not achieved by escaping the darkness within, but by transforming it into the very force that carries us toward the light.

26/05/2026

Tacitus wrote of FEMALE DRUIDS while describing the brutal slaughter of the Druids by the Romans on the island of Mona in Wales. In his account, he speaks of women known as Banduri, female Druids, who defended the sacred island and cast curses upon the black-clad invaders.
Tacitus also observed that among the Celts there was no true distinction between male and female rulers, noting the formidable power and authority Celtic women possessed.

According to Plutarch, Celtic women were nothing like the women of Greece or Rome. They took part in the negotiation of treaties and wars, stood within assemblies, and acted as mediators in disputes and quarrels.
The geographer Pomponius Mela wrote of virgin priestesses living upon the island of Sena in Brittany, women gifted with the power of prophecy and foresight.

Famous Druidesses

Irish tradition preserves two principal names for Druid women: baduri and banfilid,
the female poets and seers. Yet the names of most Druidesses have long vanished into the mists of memory. One name that survives is Fedelma, recorded in ancient texts as a woman of the court of Queen Medb of Connacht, described as a banfili. She is said to have lived in Ireland during the 10th century BC.

Perhaps the most renowned descendant of a Druid woman was Boudicca, whose mother was believed to have been a banduri. Boudicca, queen of the Celtic Iceni tribe of Britain, rose in fierce rebellion against Rome during the 1st century AD, becoming an enduring symbol of resistance and sovereign feminine power.

The Worship of Goddesses

The Druidesses honored the goddesses through seasonal feasts and sacred celebrations woven into the rhythm of the year. Among the deities they revered was Brigid, whose presence endured long after the coming of Christianity, later transformed and adopted by Christian nuns as Saint Brigid.

She stands at the threshold of the sacred grove, sickle in hand, invoking the old powers beneath the shadow of the trees - one of the Banduri, feared even by Rome.

Art: Virginie Demont-Breton
Virginie Élodie Marie Thérèse Demont-Breton (26 July 1859, Courrières – 10 January 1935, Paris) was a French painter whose artistic path began remarkably early. By the age of twenty she was already exhibiting at the Salon, and only four years later she received a Gold Medal at the Amsterdam Exposition.

The phases of the Moon reflect the Mother’s capacity to evolve and forgive. Her capacity for both laser discernment and ...
10/05/2026

The phases of the Moon reflect the Mother’s capacity to evolve and forgive.

Her capacity for both laser discernment and vast compassion.

Her ability to see without compromise and endless desire to serve love.

Her ability to create exquisite beauty and walk into crushing suffering.

She is both equal parts bloom and decay.
Life and Death.
Light and Dark. Fullness and emptiness.

She is the cycle and the circle in which all Life is contained.

And thus to work consciously with the Moon is to apprentice oneself to the way of the Mother.
To live, create, birth, die, destruct, and transform as She does.

The invitation is to live and transform consciously month after month.

The Moon & Mother
June 13, 2026
Online on zoom.
10 am Irish time
3 hours.

I’m offering this workshop because I’m currently revising and expanding my Wise Woman mentorship and this workshop will explain the new structures I have created for working with the moon phases.

The workshop will cover the moon phases and the correlating hormone phases with each moon phase. It will also expand into the underlying esoteric function of both the female hormones and the moon phases.
I will also discuss what is necessary for real sustainable change to take place in our psyche & our lives.

Contact me to book: [email protected].

Art by Shewhoisart.

25/04/2026

Nobody told me growing up that Mother Mary is literally crushing a serpent's head… unbothered, surrounded by rays of light. A mother. Makes sense doesn’t it? But somewhere along the way they swapped the warrior mother archetype for the weeping mother… who did that?

It happened sometime between the 11th and 14th centuries, when the Black Death wiped out a fifth of Europe. The Mater Dolorosa (Latin for “Sorrowful Mother”) image of Mary with a sword through her heart and tears on her face was amplified.. and generations didn’t get to see her in her entirety.

Exorcists have documented that demons react to her name with particular terror. Make of that what you will.

Both images are beautiful, but I can’t help but wonder why I never knew about this other side of her… seems deliberate.

Like something demons would do 💭

17/04/2026

St. George is not simply a saint who killed a dragon.

He is one of the oldest archetypal myths humanity has ever produced, found in nearly every culture on earth, thousands of years before Christianity.

The dragon is not an animal.

In every esoteric and psychological tradition, the dragon represents the primitive forces within the human being. Fear. Desire. The unconquered instincts. The unexamined darkness of the unconscious. Jung would call it the Shadow. It is the heavy, untamed weight of our lower nature, the part of us that devours, hoards, and destroys what it cannot control.

St. George is not an external hero.

He is the part of the human being that has chosen to awaken. That has chosen consciousness over automatism, virtue over animal impulse, spirit over instinct. His battle does not take place on a battlefield. It takes place within.

The princess he rescues is the soul, the anima in Jungian terms. That inner, luminous part of the self that is held captive by the dragon of unconsciousness until the hero finds the courage to face what lives in the dark and free her.

This is why the myth appears everywhere. The Babylonians told it as Marduk slaying Tiamat. The Egyptians told it as Horus defeating Set. The Greeks told it as Perseus and the sea monster. And then the Christian tradition gave it the name we know today.

The story is always the same.

Every human being contains the dragon. And every human being contains the saint who can slay it.

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Malmö

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