THE DIVINE FEMININE ISN’T MISSING — IT WAS REMOVED. AND MEN ARE PAYING FOR IT TOO.
The divine feminine is a function—a set of human capacities that regulate
connection, meaning, care, emotional truth, creation, and relational accountability.
Not owned by women. Not exclusive to them. But historically carried and transmitted
through them.
And over time, it was systematically erased.
Not by accident.
WHAT WAS ACTUALLY LOST
Across ancient systems—early spiritual traditions, Indigenous cultures, pre-
institutional societies—the feminine wasn’t decorative. It was structural.
It governed:
• How children were raised (attachment, not control)
• How conflict was resolved (restoration, not punishment)
• How power was held (relational accountability, not domination)
• How meaning was made (connection to land, body, and community—not
abstraction)
Then came centralised power: empire, organised religion, institutional control.
And what gets removed first when you want control?Anything that can’t be easily dominated.
We’ve been told a convenient lie: that the “divine feminine” is something
mystical, soft, optional. A vibe. A trend.
It’s not.
The divine feminine is a function—a set of human capacities that regulate
connection, meaning, care, emotional truth, creation, and relational accountability.
Not owned by women. Not exclusive to them. But historically carried and transmitted
through them.
And over time, it was systematically erased.
Not by accident.
WHAT WAS ACTUALLY LOST
Across ancient systems—early spiritual traditions, Indigenous cultures, pre-
institutional societies—the feminine wasn’t decorative. It was structural.
It governed:
• How children were raised (attachment, not control)
• How conflict was resolved (restoration, not punishment)
• How power was held (relational accountability, not domination)
• How meaning was made (connection to land, body, and community—not
abstraction)
Then came centralised power: empire, organised religion, institutional control.
And what gets removed first when you want control?Anything that can’t be easily dominated.
So:
• Women’s authority → reframed as irrational or sinful
• Intuition → dismissed as unscientific
• Emotional intelligence → labelled weak
• Community-led systems → replaced with top-down governance
The feminine wasn’t just sidelined.
It was pathologised.
What That Did to Women
Let’s not pretend women got out of this untouched.
Women were:
• Separated from their intuitive authority
• Forced into roles that mimic masculine structures to survive
• Taught to distrust their own perception
• Punished for expressing anger, truth, or non-compliance
So now you’ve got women trying to function in systems that were never
designed for relational intelligence—and being told they’re “too much” or “not
enough” at the same time.
But here’s where people stop the analysis too early.
Because the deeper damage?
Men.
WHAT HAPPENS TO MEN WITHOUT THE FEMININE
If you remove the feminine from a system, men don’t become more powerful.They become unregulated.
Not emotionally—structurally.
Because the feminine is what:
• Teaches emotional processing
• Anchors relational accountability
• Balances aggression with care
• Connects action to meaning
Without it, masculinity has no counterweight.
So what do we see?
1.
EMOTIONAL ILLITERACY
Men aren’t inherently bad at emotions.
They were just never taught a language for them.
And worse—punished for trying.
So emotion gets rerouted:
• Grief → anger
• Fear → control
• Shame → silence or dominance
2.
PERFORMANCE OVER IDENTITY
Without relational grounding, identity becomes external:• Status
• Money
• Power
• Sexual conquest
Not because men are shallow.
Because they’ve been cut off from internal validation systems.
3.
ISOLATION DISGUISED AS STRENGTH
“Men don’t talk.”
No—they were trained not to.
And now:
• Male loneliness is rising globally
• Suicide rates are disproportionately high
• Connection is replaced with competition
That’s not masculinity.
That’s deprivation.
4.
DISTORTED RELATIONSHIPS WITH WOMEN
If the feminine is misunderstood or suppressed, women become:
• Something to control
• Something to fear
• Something to idealise but never truly understand
So relationships become battlegrounds instead of partnerships.
And Here’s the Twist — Women Feel It TooWomen are now:
• Asking men to be emotionally present
• While participating in systems that trained men not to be
That tension is everywhere:
• In dating
• In parenting
• In policy
• In domestic violence narratives
We’re treating symptoms on both sides while ignoring the root:
We removed the balancing force and expected stability.
This Is Not “Men vs Women” — It’s System vs Human
This is where most conversations derail.
Blame gets thrown around.
Men get labelled.
Women get dismissed.
Meanwhile, the actual issue sits untouched:
A system that rewards disconnection.
A system where:
• Care is undervalued
• Community is fragmented
• Control is mistaken for leadership
• Trauma is individualised instead of understood structurally
WHAT RECLAIMING THE FEMININE ACTUALLY
MEANS
This is not about flipping the hierarchy.It’s about restoring balance.
Practically, that looks like:
For Men:
• Learning emotional language without shame
• Reconnecting with purpose beyond performance
• Building relationships based on presence, not dominance
• Allowing vulnerability without equating it to weakness
For Women:
• Reclaiming intuitive authority
• Rejecting systems that require self-abandonment
• Holding boundaries without losing relational depth
• Leading without having to masculinise to be taken seriously
For Both:
• Rebuilding community-based ways of living
• Valuing care as infrastructure—not charity
• Redefining power as responsibility, not control
The Reality No One Wants to Say Out Loud
We don’t have a “masculinity crisis.”
We have a missing feminine crisis.
And until that’s addressed:
• Men will keep searching for identity in the wrong places
• Women will keep burning out trying to compensate
• Systems will keep profiting off the dysfunctionFINAL THOUGHT
The divine feminine isn’t some ancient relic waiting to be rediscovered in a yoga
class.
It’s in:
• The way we listen
• The way we raise children
• The way we hold each other accountable
• The way we build systems that either honour humanity—or strip it out
You don’t need to “believe” in it.
You just need to look at what happens when it’s gone.
And right now?
We’re living in that exact outcome.