Natasha Andreo Intuitive/The Alchemy Lab: Spiritualised

  • $555 or 3 monthly payments of $199

The Alchemy Lab: Spiritualised

  • Course
  • 87 Lessons
  • 365-day access

As a True Creator, aligned action and application is paramount to our success and endeavours. During our time together, you will be held in the container of space, time, mentorship and deeper learnings from the wisdom of the Alchemists to accelerate the genius unfolding of your Creations. Learn how to enhance your creative process with the natural flow of your being when you access your superconscious. Become encouraged to work with your natural inclinations rather than against them. Master the process of bringing creative ideas to fruition and navigate challenges as they arise.

This mastermind will support you with the training, coaching and community to create the internal and external structures to grow your awareness that is aligned to your natural ability.

 You will learn to apply Alchemy powerfully to your personal life and business, to get out of your own way and experience consistent growth and expansion.

Why Alchemy?

The Hermetic worldview looks at things differently. It sees consciousness as the primary mover of the universe, and matter arising out of the distillation of spirit into matter—or making fixed the volatile. The reconciliation of the fixed and the volatile is known in alchemy as The Great Work—the magnum opus that defines the path of alchemy. The Great Work is never complete; it is an ongoing process of eternal refinement.

The Great Work of reconciling of the fixed and the volatile is represented by “squaring the circle,” a mathematical problem that was proven impossible to solve a century later. Despite the inherent impossibility of “squaring the circle,” it has remained an enduring symbol of the Great Work.

It represents the impossible task of “making fixed the volatile” or the reconciliation of spirit (volatile) and matter (fixed) that is central to the Hermetic worldview. The quest for the Philosopher’s Stone is the long and enduring process of capturing spirit in matter. So, where the materialist worldview sees elemental components of the universe, the Hermetic worldview sees only four—Fire, Water, Air, Earth.

Aristotle defined an element as : “...that out of which a thing is primarily composed, which is immanent in the thing and which is indivisible according to form.”

The Aristotlean model of four elements predominated over Western alchemy due in great part to the emphasis placed on it by St. Thomas Aquinas in the 14th century. Where did the four elements come from? Let’s start at the Great Work, which is the long-enduring impossible task of making fixed the volatile, or reconciling spirit and matter—or yang and yin