Walking the Indigo Path

Explore Roen’s Journey

Delve into Roen’s path and core beliefs, sharing the insights and intentions that inspire her guidance and transformative work.

Roen serves as Chief Diviner of the Coven of the Veiled Moon and leads its Midwest chapter. A founding member of the coven and one of the cousins behind My Cousins Coven, she brings years of study, certification, and lived practice to her work. Known for her grounded empathy and clear sight, Roen approaches divination as both craft and service — a way to support others through confusion, transition, and healing.

While Tarot and Oracle form the heart of her practice, she draws from a wider toolkit when a reading calls for it, choosing methods with care rather than habit. Her work is guided by intuition, discipline, and a steady respect for the person seeking insight. At its core, Roen’s path is about helping people reconnect with their own clarity and strength.

“A reading begins in listening — the cards settle into a pattern long before I speak. Candlelight slows the room, and in that quiet, symbols rise to the surface and the truth has space to breathe. Every layout is a conversation: the cards respond to the question, and they respond to the person asking it.”

Discover Roen’s Spiritual Journey

Roen’s work is rooted in lived experience — decades of study, spiritual exploration, and disciplined practice. What follows is not myth-making, but the biography of a reader shaped by curiosity, encounter, and sustained devotion to the unseen.

Roen’s spiritual path didn’t begin with a grand revelation. It began quietly, the way most meaningful things do — with a child who noticed more than she could explain.

She was born under a bright spring sky, a Gemini with a restless mind and a sensitivity that seemed to hum just beneath the surface of everything. Even very young, she had a way of listening that went beyond words. Her dreams were vivid and symbolic, and she often sensed emotional undercurrents in people long before anyone else named them. At the time there were no labels for it — no talk of intuition or claircognizance — just a feeling that the world had layers most people walked past without seeing.

Her grandmother recognized that sensitivity immediately. An author and astrologer, she introduced Roen to the language of the sky early on. Astrology wasn’t taught as fortune-telling; it was taught as observation — a way of learning rhythm, timing, and pattern. Those early lessons gave Roen a framework for understanding her inner life. They also planted the idea that curiosity and spirituality could live side by side without canceling each other out.

By her early teens, that curiosity needed a place to stretch. She found it in long walks with her cousin Kael to a small occult bookstore that became a second home. They would sit on the floor surrounded by books on magic, symbolism, and folklore, reading far more than they probably understood and loving every minute of it. It was playful at first — debates over candle colors, fascination with sigils — but underneath the laughter was a shared recognition: they were searching for language to describe experiences they were already having.

At sixteen, Roen and a few trusted friends formed an informal coven. What began as teenage adventure slowly turned into serious exploration. Graveyard visits meant to thrill eventually became moments of stillness and focus. During early séances, the joking would fade and the room would shift in a way none of them could dismiss. Roen felt responses — subtle at first, then undeniable. Those moments taught her both wonder and responsibility. They showed her that curiosity opens doors, but discernment keeps you safe once they’re open.

In her late teens, she had an experience that changed her understanding of consciousness entirely. During trance work she slipped unexpectedly into an out-of-body state. The fear was real, but so was the clarity that followed. It forced her to learn grounding, boundaries, and respect for altered states. That lesson — that spiritual ability requires discipline — became a cornerstone of her practice.

Adulthood didn’t narrow her search; it widened it. Roen explored many traditions, not out of confusion, but out of genuine desire to understand how different cultures approached the sacred. She spent time in Protestant and Unitarian communities, studied shamanic traditions, and eventually entered the Catholic Church, where ritual and symbolism resonated deeply with her. Even after she stepped away, she carried a lasting appreciation for ceremony and reverence. Later, her time among the Quakers introduced her to a different kind of spirituality — one rooted in silence and inner listening. That season sharpened her understanding that truth doesn’t always arrive with spectacle. Sometimes it comes quietly, and learning to sit with silence can be just as transformative as any ritual.

She came to see gods, spirits, saints, and symbols as many faces of a larger mystery — not contradictions, but languages.

Over time, Roen came to see spiritual traditions less as competing systems and more as different dialects describing the same vast mystery. Archetypes became languages rather than contradictions — ways human beings try to speak about something too large for any single framework.

What began as fascination in Tarot matured into disciplined study. The cards offered a structure that could hold intuition without smothering it. They gave her a vocabulary for conversations she was already having internally. She expanded into oracle systems and eventually pursued formal training as a tarot reader and psychic counselor, learning to pair empathy with technique.

Her studies eventually led her to discover a language for the soul. What began as teenage curiosity matured into a refined discipline. Tarot offered both structure and poetry — a way to converse with the unseen through symbol and story. She expanded into oracle systems, later designing her own, and pursued formal certification as both a tarot reader and psychic counselor.

Through disciplined training in psychic development and mediumship, Roen learned to navigate spiritual thresholds safely. Her natural empathy matured into practiced skill. She explored many divinatory tools — scrying, pendulums, dowsing rods — but the cards remained her chosen voice. They allowed her to translate intuition into clarity.

Her work today is known for its grounded honesty. She doesn’t perform mystique; she practices clarity. Roen believes spiritual guidance should empower people, not make them dependent. She values patience, second chances, and reflection, but she also understands when a hard truth is the most compassionate thing to offer. Her empathy is steady rather than dramatic — the result of years spent learning how to feel deeply without losing balance.

Indigo has always been her favorite color, and it suits her: reflective, deep, mysterious and calm. She walks her path not as an authority figure but as a companion — someone willing to sit with others in uncertainty and help translate what they’re already sensing. Through tarot, spirit communication, and simple listening, she offers insight in the hope that people leave feeling more connected to their own inner voice.

Roen’s story isn’t presented as doctrine. It’s one person’s lived spiritual narrative — a reminder that the unseen is often encountered not in grand moments, but in a lifetime of small, attentive ones.

Roen’s experiences are described as part of her personal spiritual narrative and are offered in the spirit of reflection, not doctrine.

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