Mormon to Muse

What Is Eros Energy? Reclaiming Your Aliveness After Leaving the Mormon Church

15 min · 14. kesä 2026
jakson What Is Eros Energy? Reclaiming Your Aliveness After Leaving the Mormon Church kansikuva

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I spent years experiencing my own aliveness as a problem to manage. I was a mother of young kids, restless out of my mind, bored without intellectual stimulation — and certain something was wrong with me for wanting more than playdates and toddler story time. My husband was off chasing his dreams through medical school and residency while I sat home feeling guilty about mine. In this episode I name what was actually happening: I had a perfectly healthy life force inside me, and I'd been taught to read it as a threat to my goodness. That life force has a name. Eros — not just sexual energy, though it includes that, but the whole engine of aliveness. The pull toward beauty, creation, adventure, connection, the urge to make something for no reason at all. I walk through what eros actually is (with help from Esther Perel and Jennifer Finlayson-Fife), what it feels like when it's flowing versus when it's pushed down, why it lives in the body, and the specific ways I learned to nurture it again — honoring small wants, refusing to ask permission, protecting the empty space where desire can finally surface. If you've been going through the motions and calling it peace, this one is for you. I'm teaching a free class on June 25th at 11am on listening to your intuition — the call of eros — with easy creative exercises to help you reconnect with it. Register HERE [https://www.mormontomuse.com/intuition]

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jakson What Is Eros Energy? Reclaiming Your Aliveness After Leaving the Mormon Church kansikuva

What Is Eros Energy? Reclaiming Your Aliveness After Leaving the Mormon Church

I spent years experiencing my own aliveness as a problem to manage. I was a mother of young kids, restless out of my mind, bored without intellectual stimulation — and certain something was wrong with me for wanting more than playdates and toddler story time. My husband was off chasing his dreams through medical school and residency while I sat home feeling guilty about mine. In this episode I name what was actually happening: I had a perfectly healthy life force inside me, and I'd been taught to read it as a threat to my goodness. That life force has a name. Eros — not just sexual energy, though it includes that, but the whole engine of aliveness. The pull toward beauty, creation, adventure, connection, the urge to make something for no reason at all. I walk through what eros actually is (with help from Esther Perel and Jennifer Finlayson-Fife), what it feels like when it's flowing versus when it's pushed down, why it lives in the body, and the specific ways I learned to nurture it again — honoring small wants, refusing to ask permission, protecting the empty space where desire can finally surface. If you've been going through the motions and calling it peace, this one is for you. I'm teaching a free class on June 25th at 11am on listening to your intuition — the call of eros — with easy creative exercises to help you reconnect with it. Register HERE [https://www.mormontomuse.com/intuition]

14. kesä 202615 min
jakson The Manual You Didn't Write: Why Other People's Behavior Isn't the Problem and How to Reclaim Your Peace After the Church kansikuva

The Manual You Didn't Write: Why Other People's Behavior Isn't the Problem and How to Reclaim Your Peace After the Church

We don't usually realize it, but most of us are carrying an unwritten rulebook about how the people around us should behave so that we can feel okay. Brooke Castillo calls it a manual, and in this episode I unpack why it has such a fierce grip on those of us who grew up Mormon — where the manuals weren't unwritten at all. They were handed to us, assigned to God, and wired straight into whether we believed we were good women, good wives, good mothers. I talk about why other people's behavior doesn't actually create our feelings, where that idea holds up and where it absolutely does not. And I make the case that taking one hundred percent responsibility for your own needs isn't lonely or isolating — it's the thing that finally makes real intimacy possible. When you stop grading the people you love against a rulebook they never agreed to, you get to actually see them, and they get to actually show up. If this episode names something you've been carrying, my free intuition webinar on June 25th at 11am is the next step. It's about reclaiming the inner knowing the manual taught you to override. Register through the link below. Register here for the free Intuition Class [https://www.mormontomuse.com/intuition]

7. kesä 202623 min
jakson The Midlife Trifecta: When Faith Identity and Body Shift All at Once kansikuva

The Midlife Trifecta: When Faith Identity and Body Shift All at Once

If you're somewhere in your forties and it feels like everything is coming apart at the same time — your faith, your body, your sense of who you are — you're not broken. You're in the midlife trifecta: faith transition, perimenopause, and kids leaving home, all colliding at once. In this episode, we'll talk about why this season hits women raised in high-control religion harder than most. You were handed a ready-made identity and never got the messy developmental years where you learn to trust yourself. What's inside: Why "faith crisis" is the wrong term, and what's actually in crisis How to grieve the life you thought you'd have — and why skipping it backfires Why you don't need to figure out "who you are" right now Hormones are valid: your feelings are real, even when they're chemical The case for not burning the house down until you've lived outside for a while Finding your "feral cats" — the women already surviving out here Free class — Intuition Hour: How to Find Yourself Again [https://www.mormontomuse.com/intuition] June 25th at 11am. I'll teach a step-by-step framework for rebuilding trust with yourself. This isn't about following me. It's about learning to hear you. Click to register now before you forget.  It's your one wild and precious life.  No time to waste.

31. touko 202623 min
jakson You Were Never Unworthy: How Unconditional Positive Regard Heals the Damage of Mormon Worthiness Culture kansikuva

You Were Never Unworthy: How Unconditional Positive Regard Heals the Damage of Mormon Worthiness Culture

What if the system that claimed to be making you good was actually the thing standing in the way? In this episode we go deep on one of the most important distinctions for women rebuilding after Mormonism — the difference between unconditional positive regard and worthiness culture. Not as abstract concepts, but as two completely different operating systems for how a human being understands their own value. And what it actually costs to spend your formative years in the wrong one. We talk about the temple recommend, the worthiness interview, the tithing settlement, the conditional eternal family — not to relitigate the church, but to name precisely what those structures did to your nervous system and why the wiring doesn't leave just because the institution does. We also go somewhere most deconstruction content doesn't — into the legitimate fear underneath it all. If the threat of unworthiness was what was keeping me good, who am I without it? That question deserves a real answer. This episode gives one. And we end where it always ends for me — at the canvas. With the dishes in the sink. With the first time I listened to myself instead of the ledger, and what I found out when I did. IN THIS EPISODE * What unconditional positive regard actually is — and what it isn't * Where the internal editor comes from and why it feels like your own voice * The specific structures of Mormon worthiness culture and what they produce in a person * Why the wiring outlasts the institution * The difference between genuine self-development and self-punishment dressed as self-improvement * Why the threat of unworthiness doesn't make people good — it makes them careful * What happens to moral development when the external structure falls away * The Steinbeck quote that reframes everything * What UPR for yourself actually looks like in a real life — including dirty dishes and a paintbrush   RESOURCES MENTIONED * The Reclamation Sketchbook [https://www.mormontomuse.com/sketchbook] — free guided creative resource for women rebuilding after faith transition * East of Eden by John Steinbeck — the source of the quote that closes the episode * Carl Rogers, On Becoming a Person — if you want to go deeper on unconditional positive regard

24. touko 202639 min
jakson You Can Trust Your Feelings Again: Emotional Literacy, Embodiment, and Self-Trust After Faith Transition kansikuva

You Can Trust Your Feelings Again: Emotional Literacy, Embodiment, and Self-Trust After Faith Transition

Download the 7 Day Reclamation Sketchbook [https://www.mormontomuse.com/sketchbook] There is a feeling you know very well. You felt it in sacrament meeting, reading scripture, bearing your testimony. It was warm. It was certain. It felt like coming home to something true. And you were told — explicitly, repeatedly, from the time you were small — that feeling was proof. That it was the Holy Ghost confirming the church was true. Then you found out the church wasn't true. And the crisis wasn't just about your beliefs. It was about your feelings. Because if that feeling — the one you had trusted your entire life — if that feeling was wrong, how do you trust anything you feel ever again? That is the question this episode is built to answer. And the answer is not what you expect. That feeling wasn't wrong. It was misread. Those are two very different things — and the difference between them is going to change how you understand every feeling you've had and every feeling you're going to have. This episode is the full primer: what feelings actually are, what that confirming feeling was really telling you, what the church specifically did to your emotional life, what it means to be embodied and why Mormon women were conditioned to leave their bodies, and how to actually process a feeling all the way through. Not manage it. Not perform it. Actually feel it. This is the thing nobody taught you. It starts here. In this episode: What that warm confirming feeling was actually telling you — and why it was real even if the claims it was recruited to confirm were not Why the church's confirmation framework depended on feelings as proof — and what that required of your emotional sophistication What feelings actually are: the biology, the body, and why the 90-second emotional wave matters The difference between a feeling, a thought, and a story — and what it costs you to collapse them Feelings as a compass, not a camera: what your feelings can and cannot tell you, and the one question that helps you read them accurately The specific mechanisms Mormonism used to distort your relationship with your feelings — prescribed emotions, spiritual bypassing, performed certainty, and the internal gatekeeper that keeps running long after you leave The particular emotional burden placed on Mormon women — and how being responsible for everyone else's emotional climate meant abandoning your own What embodiment actually means, why Mormon women were specifically conditioned to leave their bodies, and what it costs you when you try to process feelings without one The difference between experiencing a feeling and actually moving through it — and the tell that reveals whether you've been feeling or just managing A five-step process for processing a feeling from the body up Why emotional literacy is the foundation of self-trust, and why creative practice is one of the most direct paths there. References: Jill Bolte Taylor, My Stroke of Insight — the 90-second emotional wave Jill Bolte Taylor TED Talk: "My Stroke of Insight" The CTFAR self-coaching model (Brooke Castillo

17. touko 202629 min