First Collection — Pre-Launch
Healing, Made Wearable
Six garments carrying trauma-informed affirmations. Designed to be part of your daily practice — not a cure, not a statement, just clothing that respects the work you're already doing.
Bone / Cream
Organic Cotton T-Shirt
"I am allowed to take up space."
The phrase sounds obvious until you notice how rarely you believe it. This is for the person who shrinks in rooms, hedges every sentence, apologizes for needing things. A daily reminder worn against the skin that needs it most.
You're on the list. ✓
Sage / Heather
Organic Cotton Crewneck
"My body is not the problem."
Trauma lives in the body first. So does recovery. This crewneck is for the person who's spent years in a body they've been taught to distrust — a gentle reclamation, worn daily, in the softest cotton we could find.
You're on the list. ✓
Sand / Warm Oat
Long Sleeve T-Shirt
"Rest is not a reward."
Productivity culture convinced a generation that rest has to be earned. It doesn't. The nervous system doesn't negotiate. This long sleeve is for the person learning that stopping is part of the work — not a break from it.
You're on the list. ✓
Charcoal / Slate
Organic Cotton Hoodie
"I am not behind."
Healing isn't linear, and neither is life. This one's for the person comparing their chapter three to someone else's chapter twelve — for the days when the voice that says "you should be further along" gets loud. You're not behind. You're here.
You're on the list. ✓
Bone / Natural
Organic Cotton T-Shirt
"Healing doesn't have to look like progress."
Some days the work is invisible. Some days showing up means staying in bed instead of pushing through. This tee is for the person who needs permission to let healing be quiet — to trust the process even when there's nothing to show for it.
You're on the list. ✓
Sage / Moss
Organic Cotton Crewneck
"I get to want things."
For the person who learned to need very little — to make themselves small, to not ask for much, to be grateful for what exists rather than honest about what's missing. Desire is not dangerous. You get to want things. Start here.
You're on the list. ✓