Somewhere along the way, we stopped gathering.
Not the kind where you show up to a networking event and trade business cards. Not the Instagram-worthy brunch where everyone performs happiness. The real kind. The ancient kind. Women sitting in a circle, telling the truth, holding space for each other’s pain and joy.
For thousands of years, across every culture and tradition on earth, women gathered. They gathered to share wisdom during childbirth. To grieve together after loss. To celebrate milestones. To simply say: I see you. You’re not alone.
We need that back. Desperately.
The Loneliness Epidemic Is Real
Here’s a number that should alarm us: women today report higher levels of loneliness than at any point in recorded history. We have more “connections” than ever — followers, contacts, group chats — and fewer people we can actually call at midnight when life falls apart.
This isn’t a personal failure. It’s a design problem. Modern life is built for efficiency, not intimacy. For productivity, not presence. We’ve traded kitchen-table conversations for scrolling. We’ve traded vulnerability for curated feeds.
And women are paying the price — in anxiety, in burnout, in the quiet desperation of feeling invisible in a hyperconnected world.
What a Circle Actually Is
A women’s circle isn’t complicated. It’s not therapy (though it can be therapeutic). It’s not a class (though you’ll learn). It’s not a club (though you’ll belong).
A circle is simply this: women showing up, being honest, and holding space.
In practice, that looks like:
- A space where “I’m not okay” is a complete sentence — no one rushes to fix you
- Real listening — not waiting for your turn to talk, but actually hearing each other
- No hierarchy — everyone’s voice matters equally
- Consistency — showing up regularly, building trust over time
- Celebration and grief, side by side — because life holds both, and so should community
- Confidentiality — what’s shared in the circle stays in the circle
It can happen in a living room, a park, a café, or on a video call. The location doesn’t matter. The intention does.
Why Circles Work (According to Science and History)
This isn’t just feel-good philosophy. Research consistently backs it up:
- Social connection is a health factor as significant as diet and exercise. Women with strong support networks have lower rates of depression, anxiety, and chronic illness.
- Co-regulation — when women gather, their nervous systems actually help regulate each other. Being in the presence of calm, caring people literally calms your body.
- Narrative identity — sharing your story in a supportive environment helps you make meaning of your experiences. You don’t just tell your story; you understand it differently.
Historically, women’s circles have been:
The format changes. The need never does.
What to Look For in Your Circle
Not every group is a circle. Here’s how to tell the difference:
Safety Over Comfort
A good circle isn’t always comfortable — growth rarely is. But it should always be safe. You should feel free to be honest without fear of judgment, gossip, or dismissal.
Diversity of Experience
The most powerful circles include women at different life stages, from different backgrounds, with different perspectives. Homogeneity feels easy; diversity makes you grow.
Space for Silence
Not every moment needs to be filled. Some of the most meaningful experiences in a circle happen in shared silence — just being together without performing.
Mutual Support, Not Advice-Giving
The best circles listen more than they prescribe. When someone shares a struggle, the response isn’t “you should…” — it’s “I hear you” and “I’ve been there too.”
Regular Rhythm
Community isn’t built in a single powerful gathering. It’s built in showing up, again and again. Weekly or biweekly rhythm matters more than monthly events.
You Can Start One Today
You don’t need credentials. You don’t need a program. You need three things:
1. A few willing women — start with two or three. That’s enough.
2. A regular time — same time each week or every two weeks. Consistency builds trust.
3. A simple structure — open with a moment of stillness, share a question or theme, take turns speaking, close with an intention. That’s it.
Some opening questions to try:
This Is What We’re Building
At The Blessed Mother, we believe the circle is the oldest and most powerful technology women have. Not an app. Not a course. Just women, together, telling the truth.
We’re building circles — online and offline — where women from every background, every belief system, and every life stage can gather. Where a 22-year-old and a 55-year-old can sit side by side and both feel seen. Where your doubts and your dreams get equal airtime.
Because community isn’t something you consume. It’s something you create. Together.
And it starts with showing up.
—
Ready to find your circle? [Explore The Blessed Mother community →]
