Meet Sigourney BelleĀ 

Sigourney Belle is an Author and Theologian whose work restores the body as a site of divine revelation. With a controversial presence and uncompromising voice, she writes and teaches at the intersection of medicine, mysticism, and cultural transformation.

Raised on North Island, a small island off the coast of Western Australia, she learned early what it meant to live in harmony with the rhythms of nature—a knowing that would become the foundation of everything she built. Growing up without the noise of modern civilization, attuned to the cycles of the ocean and the rhythms of the earth, she developed an understanding that has shaped her entire body of work: a return to nature, both outer and inner. As within, so without.

Her work is underpinned by Joseph Campbell's insight: "The goal of life is to make your heartbeat match the beat of the universe, to match your nature with Nature." This is not metaphor for Sigourney—it is the lived principle at the heart of her teaching, writing, and healing.

Growing up in a crayfishing family on an island with no shops, no cars, and only a small community attuned to the pulse of the ocean, Sigourney developed an intimacy with life that refused abstraction. She always knew she would be a writer. What she didn't know was how circuitous the path would be.

At fifteen, she saw a psychic—a former medical doctor who had discovered his own gifts of medical intuition. He told her she would one day do similar work. She laughed it off. That wasn't the plan.

But life had other plans.

Sigourney went on to study Physiotherapy and worked in hospitals for eight years. It was there, moving through wards and clinics, that she began to notice something she couldn't explain: she could see and feel what was happening in a patient's body before even entering the room. With no guidance and no language for what was unfolding, it took years to understand that she was medically intuitive—that the psychic had been right.

While working clinically, Sigourney was simultaneously traveling throughout the East, apprenticing with masters in Ayurveda, Yoga Therapy, Astrology, Tantra, and Buddhism. She lived in monasteries and ashrams, studying esoteric and Eastern medicine—not as an escape from the medical field, but as a deepening of it. She returned home and began teaching meditation and yoga at twenty-four, integrating what she had learned abroad with the somatic intelligence she carried from the island and the hospital alike.

By day, she worked as a physiotherapist. By night and in the spaces in between, she practiced Tantric work with men as a Dakini—holding sacred space for awakening through the body. She also began teaching women, men, and couples how to live with greater intimacy, beginning first with themselves.

After years of treating her purpose as a side practice, Sigourney decided to take it seriously. She trained as a Dancing Eros facilitator and founded Wild Grace, a global company that taught women Tantra and sacred intimacy. The business scaled quickly, reaching thousands of women worldwide. After three years, she sold it and transitioned into mentoring women to build businesses that didn't require them to abandon themselves for success.

This work culminated in her first book, Wild Business, which became a bestseller and earned her a position on the Forbes Business Council. The book was featured in The New York Times and numerous other publications, offering women a new paradigm for feminine-led business that rewrites the very idea of success.

Then, Sigourney conceived her daughter.

Motherhood called forth a more grounded, integrated version of herself. It was during this transition that she founded Soma MysticaĀ®, a global company that trains thousands of practitioners worldwide in a synthesis of somatic therapy and esoteric teachings from the East. She also established The International Institute of Esoteric Medicine, designed to restore the esoteric foundations that have been lost as Eastern medicine has proliferated through the West.

Her journey through matrescence—becoming a mother—reoriented her entire value system. This transformation became the foundation for her second book, The MotherWild Revolution: Cultural Change through Generational Activism, an intimate documentation of her transition into motherhood and a guide to raising securely attached, emotionally intelligent children. She deepened her study of maternal medicine with world-renowned physician Dr. Oscar Serrallach and pursued further university studies in Women's Health and Somatics, grounding her esoteric wisdom in clinical research.

As a researcher bridging neuroscience with somatics, Sigourney is affiliated with TiniHabitat and Planetary Health Lab, where she runs nature-based somatic therapy programs that blend evidence-based care with integrative healing for planetary health. Her work demonstrates that personal restoration and ecological restoration are inseparable.

Today, Sigourney directs and oversees Soma Mystica while focusing primarily on her work as an author. A pioneer in the field of somatic therapy and founder of multiple successful businesses, she is dedicated to her purpose: supporting women to develop deeper self-intimacy and connection to their feminine heart in relationships by desensitizing them to their true feminine essence and blueprint.

She is currently writing three books: God in a Woman's Body, The Shape Love Refuses to Take, and When Eros Overthrows an Empire. Her teaching centers on Feminine Theology—a restoration of the Divine Feminine to theological consciousness and a reclamation of the body as sacred text.

Her flagship body of work, Soft Body, supports women in living in intimacy with their own divine biology—an embodied theology that refuses the split between flesh and spirit.

Sigourney's work draws from over two decades of clinical practice, esoteric study, initiatory experience, and lived devotion. An esteemed international bestselling author and storyteller, she writes from inside the remembering—offering readers an experience and taste of transformation through her own personal story of awakening to love through the initiation of the soul. She documents her journey not as instruction, but as invitation—the restoration of what was exiled, the return of what was sacred, the reclamation of aliveness as a spiritual and political act.

She lives with her daughter, still listening to the rhythms she learned on the island, still writing the truths the body has always known.