The Via Divina. This is where the healing work begins.

This is a space for ancestral healing, ceremony, and sacred craft.

This is the path for those who are ready to meet what has been carried, and choose what gets passed forward.

The Via Divina is rooted in earth-based spiritual practice and ancestral wisdom — held by Andrea Girón Mathern, PhD, practitioner, maker, and ceremonialist.

The work lives at the intersection of rigor and reverence. It draws from social science, earth-based tradition, and the quiet knowledge that has always moved through lineages.

The Three Doors

The Via Divina holds three distinct but interconnected paths. Most people find their way in through one door. A session, a piece of sacred craft, a ceremony that marks something that needed marking. However you arrive, you are welcome to stay and explore the rest. The work is designed to move together.

Ancestral Healing Work

One-on-one sessions for lineage healing, grief integration, and the tending of what has been passed down. We work with the blessings and resilience in your lineage to attend to what is unresolved, unspoken, and ready to move.

Ceremony

Ritual held with care to mark and celebrate thresholds, seasons, grief, and gathering. Fire ceremony, ancestral altar work, women's circles, and bespoke ceremonial containers for individuals and groups.

Sacred Craft

Sacred items that have been botanically infused, prayed over, and made to accompany your practice. Ritual kits to support connection through dreams, journeys, and divination, blessing oils, and corn husk ritual dolls made in ceremony to honor and carry your intentions.

My invitation for you to join me on The Via Divina.

I built this practice because I needed it to exist.

I come from people who carried their medicine quietly, through migration, through loss, through the particular grief of not being able to name who they were. I am a researcher and a ceremonialist, a maker and a practitioner. I don't think those things are in conflict.

The Via Divina is the place where all of it lives together.

We come from strength and struggle. What was carried to us, however quietly, was enough to bring us here. Now we carry it forward.