Naamah appears in Cain's lineage, right before the flood. She also appears as Noah's wife, the woman who survived and rebuilt the world. The same figure. Destruction and salvation. Demon and matriarch. The texts preserve this paradox because they couldn't resolve it and that's where her power lives.
Uncover the Hidden History
Trace Naamah through Genesis, the Book of Yashar, Rabbinic commentaries, and Kabbalistic texts like the Zohar. Discover why Rashi tried to rationalize her, why Nachmanides struggled to explain her presence, and how the mystics transformed her into something theology couldn't contain.
Awaken Through Deep Meditative Work
Work through 10 guided meditations designed to bring you into contact with the shadow aspects of your psyche. These aren't relaxation exercises—they're structured encounters with the parts of yourself you've been taught to deny. Uncomfortable. Clarifying. Transformative
Reframe the Demonized Feminine
Her name means 'pleasant.' She didn't use force—she sang. She attracted. And that's precisely what made her dangerous. Understand how power that draws instead of dominates gets labeled 'evil,' and what happens when you stop accepting that narrative.
Transform Your Relationship With Shadow
Learn the difference between Lilith's work (refusal, boundaries, departure) and Naamah's work (creation, desire, transformation from within). If you've done the 'no' work, this teaches you the 'yes' that comes after
A Living Current of Power
This isn't historical study for its own sake. The texts reveal a current that's still active, still accessible. Students report shifts in how they relate to their desires, their power, and the parts of themselves they'd been taught to hide