
Fairy Tea
Fairy Tea is a deeply personal podcast where I share the raw, honest messiness of life—exploring how to break free from societal expectations and follow the heart’s calling. Blending storytelling, spirituality, folklore, and self-discovery, Fairy Tea is both magical and real, whimsical yet grounded. It’s a space to embrace uncertainty, face challenges without fear, and stay curious about the possibilities ahead. Through my own experiences, I invite listeners to see that a new way of living is possible—one that is intuitive, soulful, and uniquely their own.
Fairy Tea
The City That Taught Me To Speak Without Words
Today, I share with you the story of my transformative journey in Cali, Colombia. I tell stories of personal growth, spirituality, and the magic of travel while also reflecting on my initial motivations for moving to Cali, the unexpected connections I made, and the profound impact the city had on my life. Through my experiences, I emphasize the importance of staying open to new possibilities and the magic that can arise from unexpected circumstances.
Highlights:
- Finding My Voice and The Journey of Self-Discovery
- My Journey to Cali
- Traveling Alone Opened Up New Possibilities in My Life
- Cali is A City of Transformation and Discovery
- The Energy of Cali
- The Magic in Everyday Encounters with Uber Drivers
- How Community Physical Therapy Healed Me
- Staying Open to New Experiences Can Lead to Profound Transformations
This episode was produced by six-two.studio
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Fairy Tea is a deeply personal podcast where I share the raw, honest messiness of life—exploring how to break free from societal expectations and follow the heart’s calling. Blending storytelling, spirituality, folklore, and self-discovery, Fairy Tea is both magical and real, whimsical yet grounded. It’s a space to embrace uncertainty, face challenges without fear, and stay curious about the possibilities ahead. Through my own experiences, I invite listeners to see that a new way of living is possible—one that is intuitive, soulful, and uniquely their own.
Instagram: @fairytea.podcast or @akayourfairygodmother
Sophie (00:00.362) Welcome to Fairy Tea, where we sip on the thorough wisdom of the Fairy Realm and uncover its ancient secrets for healing, pleasure and rest. I'm your host Sophie, here to sprinkle a little enchantment into your everyday life. Think of this as one great unfolding experiment. An invitation to dance with magic, trust the unseen and let curiosity lead the way.
Sophie (00:35.522) Hello my little fairies, welcome back to another episode. I just want to thank you guys for following along, for being here, for entering this space with me and making this whole journey more alive. I'm genuinely enjoying this process so much and as you might notice, I'm still very much looking for my voice in this, trying to...
experiment with different styles. Like, I don't know whether you've noticed, but I got rid of the spell in the beginning. It just felt too stiff, maybe. It just wasn't giving what I thought it would. And I think this is just a big part of what we're doing here, of this experiment, of enjoying the process rather than trying to look at this as a perfect product. And...
I just appreciate you guys so much and the feedback and just like I want to encourage you over and over again to reach out, to have a conversation because those subjects are so near and dear to me, to my heart. They make so much of who I am and what I think on a daily basis. So I'd love to like chat with you guys and go deeper and I would love to hear what you like, what you don't like and just refine it and
find the style that works long term because I'm really planning on doing this on a long term basis because I feel like it's a beautiful way of like bringing people along but also reflecting on a journey that sometimes can feel so daunting or scary or... because what I'm doing there's no real path forged yet, right? I'm just, I'm out here
I'm listening to my heart. I'm trying to find my unique way. so talking it over and like putting it into a narrative really helps me to let go of an idea or an illusion of control. And so I'm so happy that we get to do this together, that you're here. Thank you to each and every one of you.
Sophie (03:00.206) And today I want to talk about a city that has become so near and dear to me. A city two years ago, I hadn't even known that it existed. And I'm talking about Cali, Cali in Colombia. So as you guys know, I've been living in Cali for almost pretty much a year.
And I want to share at first how I got here because I think it's a very funny story. It again, you're going to laugh at me, but it again involves a guy. Kind of like a pattern. I think that was why it was so important for me to learn how to enrich my life more with love in different areas because I was like I told you, I was so overly focused on
finding a guy and being with a guy and it was just this one area where I thought matching was possible and I couldn't see that I can make every area of my life magical. But again, it took me a while to understand that. At the time I was still back in Zurich, I was actually about to move to Italy because I wanted to pursue a jewelry career in Italy.
And I was seeing this guy, well seeing is a bit of a stretch. We've known each other for a while. Let's name him Freddie. So Freddie and I, we've known each other through mutual friends. We've seen each other here and there. We were like friendly with each other, but we didn't know each other well. And so we met at a mutual friend's birthday.
weeks before Freddie was about to go travel for a couple of months, actually kind of indefinitely, but he knew he wanted to be back by summer. That was in January 2024, so one and a half years ago. And Freddie and I met, we kind of hit it off all of a sudden and ended up seeing each other two times before. He
Sophie (05:27.532) left for Colombia. That was actually kind of one of the first times I was ever like, traveling to Colombia, interesting. And I think for a very long time, so I love traveling all my life. I think I've traveled a fair bit. But up until then, I was very much under the impression that I would find my next boyfriend.
and then start traveling again. I did some bigger travels with my long-term boyfriend, but once we split up, it was also due to the pandemic, but I really, like by myself, I never really traveled. And so when the guy and I, I mean, we only saw each other two times, I wasn't anything serious at that point, but when we said goodbye, he was like, hmm, and when are you gonna come visit me in Columbia? And that kind of like put the seed to my head.
And it was, it grew pretty fast. think at that point I was like, So I was going to move to Italy in summer and it was just January, February. I was like, well, I have some time. And then like the whole like thought process started of like, why am I waiting for me to find a partner to travel? I could actually travel by myself. And that for the first time I felt like,
I was grown up enough and I was strong enough, also financially, I had enough to do that. So was like, why not? And I knew, I remembered that I have good friends in Mexico that I've always wanted to visit. And so I figured, well, I could just, you know, do a bigger thing out of it. I don't necessarily only have to go to Columbia. I can do like a bigger trip if I already fly over there.
visit Mexico and then Colombia and I've always wanted like I told you I've always wanted to go to Peru. So it was kind of this all of a sudden it felt really alive. It felt like it made so much sense. I had the time. It all kind of came together. And yes, sure. The main reason was a guy and I was like, I want to see that guy. And you know, I'm not ashamed to admit that because honestly,
Sophie (07:52.462) Probably nothing else could have gotten me out of my hermit bunker lifestyle at the time. So I'm happy that it happened like that, even though I know it's frowned upon to be like, you just did it for a guy, whatever. You know, the reason why I did it doesn't really matter. The point is I did it. And...
So, a few weeks later, think six weeks later or so, I actually embark on what I thought was just going to be a three-month trip. And then, kind of like, almost seamlessly turned into this life project. isn't, I mean, life is just so magical. could, there was no fucking chance I could have known one and a half years ago where I would be right now. And I...
I love that so much and I want to live my life like that for the rest of my life to just be open to the possibilities, be open to where my life wants to drag me and what feels alive and listen to that. is it always easy? No, of course not. But looking back, just, I genuinely enjoy every single second about it, every single pivot, every single
Well, I'm getting ahead of myself. So March 2024, I embark on that plane. fly to Mexico City. I spend a month traveling through Mexico. I have a great time, even though things are very new for me. I was very shy and scared and insecure and like looking back, I was such a baby and
I didn't, I had no idea what I was doing, but I still had a great time. I met cute people. It was, it was fun. And so I was supposed to fly from Cancun. didn't spend any time in Cancun, but like close by. I was flying out from Cancun to Columbia to see Freddie. And I remember so distinctly how a week prior to my flight, we stayed in contact. We stayed like,
Sophie (10:15.694) flirty but not too, you know, not too involved with one another, but we stayed in contact throughout and we were actually planning on traveling quite a bit together afterwards after me visiting him. And so a week prior to my flight, I remember that something in his conversational style, it kind of shifted and it made me nervous, but I wasn't too like,
overly into that guy. So it's just like, just want to know. And like, Hey, I'm sensing some changes in your in your in how you relate to me, like, is everything okay? And then he was like, oops, like you actually noticed that? Like, yeah, there's actually something I have to tell you. And I was, I remember it was right before an 11 or 14 hour bus ride, where I had very, like,
inconsistent access to internet. And so I was like, I cannot call you in the next 15 hours, but please make me a voice message because I just need to know. I don't want to sit on a 15 hour bus ride knowing that there's something we have to talk about that will probably change my trajectory. Please, please make me a voice message. And that's what he did.
sent me this 10 minute voice message he was like rambling on about you know feeling very uncomfortable and essentially saying that he met someone else which you know was the risk of the game. I could have flown directly to Colombia which I didn't want to do. I prioritized my own trip which I'm so glad I did but then I was like well
You know, I already had the flight. I was supposed to stay at his place, not for a long time, but still. And so I asked him, was like, well, should I still come? Should I change my flight? Should I go somewhere else? Like, where do we stand? And he was like, no, no, like, I really want you to come. Like, it would be fun to show you the place. Cause at the time he was already staying there for a couple of months. It would be really cool to show you around. And we can just hang out, the three of us.
Sophie (12:35.386) And I mean, I remember that it stung, obviously, like my ego was hurt. I'm not gonna lie. But at the time, I think it was, I was very much already aware of my patterns. And I was just sick and tired of making sad stories around as to why a guy didn't want to be with me. So I remember that I just
try to train my brain whenever something didn't happen in the way that I wanted it to happen. I try to tell myself, well, just wait for it and maybe it turns out to be for the better. Just approach it as if it was for the better. And that's not an easy task, right? Because we have expectations, we have hopes, so...
I really had to remind myself over and over again that that might be the best thing happening for me. And as you can see now, it was definitely the best thing happening for me. But at the time I was still kind of like, oh, whatever. And then I wasn't sure whether I should still change my flight, whether I would, you know, be too uncomfortable to see them together. And so I called my sister and she was like, my sister is the only person
in the world who's allowed to give me advice because my sister knows me inside out and she just has my best interests at heart always. And she's the most, she's a tourist, so she's an earth sign and she's just the most pragmatic but at the same time sensitive person. She strikes the perfect balance, always.
And so I asked her, I'm like, what do you think I should do? And she goes, listen, if you change your trip now, you're always going to feel like you did this trip or you planned this trip around this guy. Do this trip exactly how you planned it because this trip is for you. Mic drop. I just want to give my perfect precious sister
Sophie (14:53.324) some credits at this point. mean, honestly, she's the best human being in this world. She's my best friend. She's my advisor. She's my, she's everything to me. Like I would kill for that girl. But really what she said in that, in that moment, like it hit home so hard. And that's what I ended up doing. And because the guy, Freddie, felt so bad about ditching me last minute, he offered
for me to stay at his Airbnb while he would spend those couple of days at his new whatever acquaintance flirt. They're not together anymore. was a brief thing. anyways, so I get to Kelly. had no expectations whatsoever. If it hadn't been for Freddie, I would have
probably never known that this place existed. And there would also not have been a reason for me to get here and to come here. And I especially love to travel to places that I have very little idea of what they are. feel like, I mean, New York is a bad example because I love New York so much, but when you travel to New York, you have such a clear idea of what
you're gonna get, you know, because it appears in so many movies and so many TV series, or at least I, like I had a fair idea of what New York's gonna be like before I got there. Whereas Kelly, I had absolutely no idea. I also didn't research it too much, so I was really like in the dark about everything.
But that also led to me not having any expectations towards it, right? And so I got here, I got here very late at night. And I remember, so mind you, I was already traveling for over a month through Mexico and I flew over. I arrived to Cali very late at night. I think it was, well, not that late. I think it was like eight or nine-ish, but it was already dark. And...
Sophie (17:14.382) I had to take a cab from the airport to drive into the city. It was about a 40 minutes drive. And I remember when we approached the area that I was thereafter living at, there was this surge in my body. There was this feeling that kind of like came over me out of the blue.
and I looked out of the window and I couldn't see much because it was dark, right? But I just had this overwhelming feeling of like, I'm gonna like it here. And that didn't happen to me anywhere I stayed in Mexico. And so that was an interesting first telltale. And so I arrived, I was originally planning on staying.
four to five days. I wanted to go to Medellin. I wanted to travel some more in Colombia. Long story short, I ended up staying two months. I ended up, so I had my plan was to stay three weeks in Colombia and then do like big travel through Peru. I canceled everything and I stayed as long as I could until I had, cause my flight was out of Peru. Like I already had that.
So I had to go through Peru to go back to Switzerland, but I really stayed up until the very last day. I could stay in Colombia before I had to go to Peru. I stayed and I only stayed in Cali and so many serendipitous, wonderful little things happened. People I met, it just one thing led to another, led to another, led to another. And
I wholeheartedly believe that it was this place that kind of opened itself up to me. Because Cali is really a city, you don't get a map to access it. Cali is actually really hard to access because it's a lot of chaos. You kind of only get to see certain places if you know certain people.
Sophie (19:36.16) It's also really random. doesn't have like that many tourist attractions. It's still a very developing place. It's only recently has become a little less dangerous, albeit it still is one of the most dangerous cities in the world. And I want to touch on that a little more further down the line, but it is very much in development. so you...
You don't necessarily have those typical landmarks where you go, even though I don't really care about those kind of things anyways. I think most of the people that come here, so Calais, they call it the capital of the salsa. They have their own salsa style. So it's very much like a dancer city. A lot of people that come here, most of the tourists that come here, they want to learn how to dance. They want to take dancing lessons. It's like a big thing here.
I took some dancing lessons. Unfortunately, I eventually found out that I have... I don't really have that much talent. My hips just don't... Yeah, my hips lie. As opposed to Shakira's hips that don't lie. My hips lie, but not because they want to, just because they can't move properly. Anyways, so it's a city you don't really get access to easily. And...
It did feel like it opened itself up to me just because I was open to it. And whenever I try to explain to people what Kali is or how Kali feels, I'm at a loss of words because it's really a place you have to experience for yourself to understand because Kali has a very special and unique energy. Like I mentioned before, Kali is super chaotic.
Like there's, I would say there's a fair level of anarchy going on here. And that's kind of like what drew me in and what fascinates me to this day about this place. The people here, they know how to dance with the chaos. So they understood that they can't control whatever is happening, but they have a way of like,
Sophie (21:59.822) vibrating with the flow to make their lives work to a certain extent. And that is just such a different approach to life, to society than I'm used to from Switzerland. Switzerland is very organized. There is no chaos whatsoever. And it's like this wild contrast almost between a place that like died down every inch of life possible and a city that is
so vibrant, so full of life, to its own detriment almost at times. But also its biggest charm, its biggest allure. And Kelly has this very magnetic pull. A lot of people, like there's this phenomenon going on. Like what happened to me is like I'm not a like a single one-off case. So many people that come here with the plan of like staying
a few nights end up staying so much longer than they thought. So there's really like, they talk about there's this phenomenon. so Cali is like the third biggest city in Colombia after Medellin and Bogota, but it really feels so much smaller. It's about 3 million people, which is a big city. And that's like due to like a lot of poverty, a lot of like
the outskirts, the poor areas, they're kind of like cut off from the more centered tourist areas. And so really, it kind of feels like a little village in the center where after a while you kind of like know everybody left and right, which has its own charm to it. And so like I said, I spent almost a year here
It was a very transformative time on so many levels. And I think the energy here was very contributed in very non-tangible ways to my development. really, when I look back on the last year, I liked the analogy of being a butterfly and being in a cocoon. And I feel like it was almost like this, my cocoon phase that I spent here.
Sophie (24:28.398) I lived a very calm,
not very exciting life, not that I didn't have joy or things that I did, but I didn't necessarily do much or go out a lot. I barely went out at night. I did a lot of things just for myself, like lot of like routines and like rituals, and I spent a lot of time by myself and I needed that remote time. I needed
to kind of cut myself off from... So in Switzerland, I felt like all the time someone wanted something from me left and right. Like I felt there was always something going on. And so in Cali, I really didn't have much that was going on. I kind of like plucked myself out of a busy life and implanted me into naturally in a city where you don't really know anyone.
especially at first, you're gonna spend a lot of time by yourself. But it's what I needed so badly to really like reconnect with my own energy, to feel out what my own energy even was, you know? And it almost feels like I built this like little monastery. had my own apartment. I always bought myself fresh flowers. I cooked my, I mostly cooked for myself.
I read a lot, I did a lot of introspection, lot of massages and other therapies. And it was almost like the city's energy kind of shaped me through that, through its joy, through its celebration, through its greenery. Cali is a very green, lush city. And it has so much-
Sophie (26:28.168) It's so unique in so many ways. Also, the architecture here is so special because it's like four degrees above the equator. So it's the same temperature pretty much throughout the year. And therefore a lot of houses are half open. Like my living room, for example, is like almost like a terrace. Like I don't have glass in my windows.
because I don't have to, it's degrees pretty much every day all day. And that makes it so airy, so flowy, and that also has an impact on your psyche, right? And also in other ways, I think Kali had a lot of influence on my spiritual development. I think for a long time, I was very much resisting getting too much into spirituality.
scared of being perceived as too much of a woo-woo girly, not taken seriously anymore. obviously there's like this narrative in the West and that kind of shaped me and implemented certain fears in me. when I got to Calais, was almost like, so people here are very religious and very superstitious too. It's interesting because
You know, folklore in the West is like, there's almost none left or like not in like a common sense kind of way. And that's due to the Catholic Church who eradicated essentially everything related to folklore, fey, mysticism. Whereas even though in Latin America,
the Catholic Church is still very present and people are very religious, it kind of like coincided throughout time. So people here are very superstitious, they believe in fairies, they believe in little house gnomes, they call them dwindles here. Everybody believes in them. Like this is not a thing of like, you know, the freaks.
Sophie (28:49.696) in the corner, no, no, no, like everybody believes in them. I do believe in them. And it's funny because if you, so if you tell someone in Switzerland, fairies exist, then most likely the person would laugh at you and be like, well, yeah, right. So here, if you tell, like, if you tell a person fairies don't exist,
they're gonna laugh at you. They're gonna be like, well, you can believe that, but good riddance. Which I think is so funny and just goes to show that, again, we just all live in narratives and the narratives shape our lives. And we can choose in which narratives we wanna live. And I ended up deciding that I much rather live in a world where there are fairies.
because it just seems like a way more expansive world to me, you know? And there's so much more I could tell you about. I could tell you about the millions of wonderful conversations I had throughout my stay here with all the Uber drivers. I think Uber drivers are excellent observers of communities, of society. Like I've heard some of the most precise
philosophical, nuanced observations from Uber drivers throughout my time here. Time and time again, blew me away how much they pay attention. And they talked to so many people, right? So they really, really get a feeling, get a special, almost spiritual sense.
Because they flow through the city all the time and they flow with the energy of the city and it just does something to them, I believe. And I've had Uber drivers who, there was this one Uber driver in particular that, it was a very funny story. He picked me up and shortly after we were, it was a 20 minute ride or something. We saw like a bunch of pigeons in front of the car and
Sophie (31:11.47) he goes out of the blue, he says to me, you know, I kind of feel bad for the pigeons. And I was like, not really expecting a conversation. Like I said, he didn't say anything before that. I like, and I did not expect the topic of that conversation. I was like, okay, well, what do you mean? And he was like, well, you know, everybody hates them, but they're just
creatures like we are. Like it's not their fault that everyone hates them. I feel like they're just very misunderstood. And I was kind of perplexed at him saying that. I was trying to come up with like a good question or something to like, you know, contribute to that observation. And I also thought it was really interesting. And so all that came to my mind in that moment was like, you like birds a lot.
mind you, Spanish is my third language and at the time I wasn't that fluent yet. And he says no, but he's a botanical engineer and he knows a lot about trees. And I was like, wow, that's impressive. He was already retired. He's an old guy. And so throughout our 20 minute ride, he ended up pointing out to me every single tree we cross telling me
what it's called, how invasive it is, what it does, how it thrives, what it needs, like all the information he had. And it was so amazing. It was so interesting. It was so eye-opening also. There was this one palm tree. And every time I drive by that palm tree, like I think of that guy that's called a butterfly palm tree, which, you know, obviously I love that. But also I ended up
perceiving the city in a different way through that Uber ride because all of a sudden I did know that Cali was a very lush, very green city and there are so many trees throughout the entire city. I was told that it was actually even more, there were actually even more trees and they cut some of them back. But ever since that Uber ride, I kind of like, notice it even more. It kind of transformed my perception and
Sophie (33:36.992) It was just so... It was such a serendipitous, beautiful ride and the old guy was so kind, it was so sweet. We ended up taking a selfie together and it just stayed with me. And I have so many other stories like that. There was this one guy who once drove me to the airport and on the way showed me his favorite tree. I mean, how cute is that? He was like, yeah, there's this one tree.
And I've never seen a tree like that. I, unfortunately it's on a private property and I can't access it. But every time I drive by, it just stuns me and I want to show it to you. And he shows me, and I swear to God, I've never seen a tree that beautiful. And I would have never, ever seen that. And that's what I mean by saying like people sharing their magic with me. Like when they show me something that is so dear to them.
I like, even if it's not necessarily dear to me, but in that case it was, I just, I can still feel the magic that it is to them. And that in itself is just so special. And yeah, there were so many other stories. It's just all of these things together kind of shaped how I think today, shaped how I show up, how I
And I mean, language thing is a very special thing because I got here and I barely spoke any Spanish. Kelly has a very difficult accent also to understand. And I learned it. I picked up on it throughout this year. But really what I understood, it's not so much about the words, but the people here, they're so present when they talk to you. And I wouldn't say I've mastered that, but I've definitely become way more
present, way more direct, way more intentional within a conversation than I was before. And I do think it's this place that taught me that. And I just hold so much gratitude for this place. And I have so much more I could talk about when it comes to the city. I have so many more stories how I got into physical therapy here, for example.
Sophie (36:01.518) So I had a very bad knee injury five years ago and I never really recuperated my leg well and it got really, really bad in the beginning of this year. And so through, again, through coincidences, through people that knew people, I ended up getting treated by one of the most famous orthopedists in Columbia. And through him, I got to a place for physical therapy and they
Physical therapy here works completely different than physical therapy in Switzerland. Physical therapy here is one and a half hours pretty much personal training in a room full of people who do the same. And so when I got there for the first time, I was like, what the fuck? I have to do my exercises in front of other people. Like so used to, you know, having my privacy and not being around people and definitely not showing them how.
poorly I do my exercises. But it ended up being the best thing because it takes away the loneliness and that sense of being broken. If you're in a room with five to ten other people who also try to get back to their health and it creates this sense of community and like a sense of normalcy.
also around being injured. It's not like you're damaged, but you're there and you're building yourself up and everyone around you is building themselves up as well. And so you have to picture like this really funny scenario because a lot of the people that go to that specific physical place are professional athletes. And so it's like,
a lot of professional athletes and me. That was the scenery every week and I went like three to four times every week for about three months. And if it hadn't been for those three women that run this place, like three ferocious, beautiful, powerful, strong women that run this place that is mostly frequented by
Sophie (38:28.032) athletes by men and they like they eat the men eat out of their hands like the way they handle that place is just I I'm in awe I'm in awe of those three ladies and I'm so incredibly grateful because I do feel like I was not capable of walking up stairs properly like I had issues walking up the stairs
in the beginning of this year and now I'm jumping down from chairs. A thing I haven't done in five years because my knee was too weak. they just, they're just really working their magic. And it's so interesting how the physical is connected with your spiritual, is connected with your mental, is connected with your emotional, it's body, it's all interconnected, right? Because I feel like
The stronger I got, the more I got to expand in other areas as well. And I feel like it was just this overall this year and my time in Cali was just so much dedicated to me getting better on an emotional level, but also on a physical level. And I'm at such a different point than I was in the beginning of this year. And I'm just, I, I'm so excited to see how it's going to be a year from now.
And also, I I met Sydney here, which was so serendipitous. And you guys met her, like, I'm in awe with her and she'll forever have a special place in my heart. And I just know I will see her again one way or another. And through her, so many things happened and so many next steps happened, right, of my journey and kind of
Now New York being in this, on my radar, on the things that feel alive where I feel like I'm being pulled to. So it's just one thing led to another, led to another. And I think Cali very much opened me to the subtleties of that kind of magic from the very beginning. But throughout the time I stayed here, it really taught me to just trust.
Sophie (40:52.024) those things, trust the timing of those things. So I'm gonna wrap this episode up at this point because I feel like I've been talking so much already, but I hope I just could, I hope I was able to kind of explain to you the kind of magic that drew me in. Initially, the kind of magic that transformed me over the time I was staying here and the kind of magic that I'm taking with me.
Now on my ongoing journey, as I told you on my last episode, I'm actually leaving Cali tomorrow, which is wild. I'm approaching a new chapter, but it also feels right. It feels like my time here is over. It feels like I've learned everything that I had to learn from here. Like I had like this feeling of like
something is alive here is no longer alive, which is not a judgment for this place. Like I will always cherish this place deeply, but the aliveness just lies somewhere else now and I want to follow that and I want to see what happens and I'm going to take you along for the ride and we'll see. So yeah, my cycle here is complete.
I'm incredibly grateful for what I learned, the culture, the language, the food, the energy. Cali really opened me up to life, to joy, to spirituality, and to continuous transformation. And I will carry this place with me forever as I now move into the next chapter. So I want...
for you to take this episode as a little reminder that sometimes out of the blue things and places or people can pop up and you have no idea how they can transform your life and how they can impact your life. it's just staying open and seeing where it takes you just really allows for so many layers of magic to enter.
Sophie (43:16.398) And let this be your little reminder to stay open, to stay curious and to forge your very own path. Until next time, as always, I love you little fairies.
Sophie (43:38.54) If this episode stirred something in you, I'd love to hear about it. Send me a little whisper on Instagram @fairytea.podcast or just write the words fairy wings in my DMs. That's how I'll know you were here.
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