About the Wayfinding Deck

Big change rarely arrives with clarity. Most of us move through endings, beginnings, and the long in-between with a tight chest, a tired mind, and no sense of what comes next.

The Wayfinding Deck was born in one of those seasons—a stretch of time when I couldn’t rush insight or force direction, when all I could do was listen for the next small truth.

I didn’t need a plan.
I needed relief.
I needed a different way to move through uncertainty.
I needed to have different lenses into my experience so I could listen to my life.

Each card offers a way to pause, breathe, and reconnect to the wiser, kinder voice beneath the noise.
Not by pushing.
Not by fixing.
But by listening differently.

Some cards help you understand the season you’re in.
Some remind you of the strengths you’ve forgotten.
Some offer a direction to turn toward when you feel lost.
Some help you name the fear you’ve been carrying alone.

None of them tell you what to do.
They help you feel held enough to take the step that’s already calling.

I use the Deck for all of my Encounters, Readings, and One-on-One sessions.

How the Deck is Organized

The Wayfinding Deck has five collections.

Each collection speaks to a different dimension of navigating change:

Seasons — Where am I?

The Seasons help you understand the emotional and energetic landscape you’re moving through.

They name the truth that: what works in one season will not work in another. Flourishing asks something different from you than the Dark Season. The Seasons bring relief by normalizing disorientation.

Paths — How is this unfolding?

Path cards describe the movements of transition itself—the turning points, thresholds, and archetypal motions that shape every change.

The Calling, The Departure, The In-Between, The Illumination, The Integration…These are moments you live through, not tasks you complete

They help you trust the rhythms of becoming.

Inner Allies — Who can I be here?

Inner Allies offer ways of being and inner resources that support you as you move.

Some bring steadiness (The Guardian).
Some bring courage (The Bold One).
Some bring perspective (The Sage).
Some invite innovation or play.

These aren’t roles to perform. They are energies you can lean into or allow to work through you.

Waypoints — What might guide me now?

Waypoints are subtle orientation points, a direction to turn toward when you aren’t sure what comes next.

They don’t predict or prescribe.
They point.
They whisper.
They help you sense “this way.”

Some turn you inward (Body as Teacher).
Some open the horizon (The Long View).
All remind you that there are steady places to stand, even in the midst of instability.

Fears — What’s in my way? What needs tending?

Every transition awakens fear.
Naming it softens its grip.

The Fear cards help you see what’s pulling you into urgency, control, avoidance, or overwhelm, not to shame you, but to create space for compassion, movement, and truth.

Fear becomes less of an obstacle once it becomes a conversation. Often, when are able to name a fear, it loses its power.