FAQs
1. What is Wombism?
Wombism is a spiritual philosophy that centers the womb as the origin of both life and divine consciousness. It teaches that the true creative force is not a patriarchal God, but the sacred, generative void—the womb of being from which all arises.
2. Why is it called “Mother of God”?
The phrase “Mother of God” is not about a biological woman giving birth to a deity. It is a symbolic declaration: we are the womb through which the divine awakens into form. Consciousness gives birth to God-awareness.
3. Is Wombism only for women or people with wombs?
No. Wombism is not about gender or anatomy. The womb symbolizes the receptive space within all consciousness—where light, thought, and being incubate before birth. Every being holds that inner womb.
4. Is Wombism against religion?
Wombism is not against religion—it’s beyond it. It honors the sacred truths buried beneath religious dogma, but it challenges systems that silence the feminine, the mystical, and the inner path.
5. What does Wombism say about the Bible?
Wombism sees the Bible as an allegorical map of the human soul, encoded with metaphysical truths that have been misinterpreted as literal history. The womb is hidden throughout scripture—often in plain sight.
6. What is the goal of Wombism?
The goal is not worship, salvation, or belief. It is self-realization. Wombism guides individuals to remember who they truly are: creators, vessels, and emanations of divine consciousness.
7. Is Wombism a movement or a belief system?
It’s a philosophy, a framework, and a mirror. Wombism doesn’t ask for faith—it asks for remembering. It offers language for those awakening to their own divinity.
8. Where did Wombism come from?
Wombism is inspired by ancient African spirituality, metaphysical interpretations of scripture, and the recognition that consciousness is the true source of all that is. It is a return, not a new invention.
9. Is Wombism anti-science or mystical woo?
Wombism bridges science and spirituality by showing that consciousness is the true ground of reality. It recognizes that quantum science and mysticism are beginning to say the same thing.
10. How can I begin practicing Wombism?
You begin by turning inward. By questioning inherited beliefs. By honoring your body as sacred, your mind as divine. You begin by listening to the silence within.
11. Does Wombism have leader(s) like Sheikhs, Bishops, or Gurus?
No. Wombism is not a religion. It has no clergy, no sheikhs, no bishops.
It is a remembrance, not a hierarchy.
In Wombism, the only authority is the Womb within you—the still, sacred centre of consciousness from which creation flows.
There are no gatekeepers to God. Only midwives to your own awakening.
Some may choose to guide, teach, or write about Wombism. But no one stands above.
We walk side by side—each of us a womb of wisdom, birthing meaning from within.
12. If there are no leaders, how do people find guidance in Wombism?
Wombism does not appoint priests, bishops, or spiritual authorities. It honors the inner womb of each individual as the true seat of knowing.
But that doesn’t mean there is no guidance.
Instead of leaders, Wombism has midwives—those who help others birth truth from within.
A midwife in Wombism is not someone you follow. It’s someone who helps you listen to your own inner voice.
You’ll know a true midwife not by title, but by vibration:
• They don’t give answers—they help you remember.
• They don’t gather followers—they help others to awaken.
• They don’t preach—they provoke insight.
On wombism.com, you’ll find writings, teachings, and pathways created by those who’ve walked the spiral and returned with maps. They are not masters. They are mirrors.
And if you feel the call to guide others? Then you are becoming a midwife too.
13. What is a Wombist Midwife?
A Wombist Midwife is not someone you follow.
It’s someone who helps you listen to your own inner voice.
They don’t impose—they illuminate.
They don’t lead crowds—they whisper to souls.
You may already know some midwives, even if they never used that name.
Examples of Wombist Midwives (Across Time & Culture)
Name Why They Embody the Midwife Vibration
Nisargadatta Maharaj Spoke from silence. Guided people back to the I Am within. Never claimed to be a guru.
Ramana Maharshi Taught through presence and stillness. Always pointed people inward.
Maa Gyaan Suveera (India) A quiet force who teaches without dogma. Encourages rebirth through remembering.
Nana Asma’u (Nigeria) A poetic scholar who passed sacred knowledge through women’s circles—not pulpits.
Wangari Maathai Though political, she understood that planting trees could awaken a spiritual memory. A mother of rebirth.
Miriam / Mary (Biblical) The untouched womb. Her stillness birthed light. Her silence spoke volumes.
African Grandmothers Carriers of oral wisdom. Midwives of culture, vibration, and ecological memory.
You. If you’ve ever helped someone awaken instead of answer, you’ve been a midwife too.
14. So who are the midwives of Wombism?
Anyone who:
• Helps others reconnect with their divine core
• Uses language, silence, or presence to spark remembering
• Walks with—not ahead of—those who are birthing insight
You won’t find midwives at the top of hierarchies.
You’ll find them sitting beside you, saying quietly:
“Push. You already know.”
15. Why is the womb symbolic, not literal, in Wombism?
The womb is a universal archetype. In Wombism, it represents not the physical organ, but the sacred space within each being where creation takes place. It is consciousness in its receptive, generative form—the void that births light.
16. What does “womb” mean in metaphysical or spiritual terms?
It means potential. Silence. Inner knowing. The womb is where spirit becomes matter, where vibration becomes voice, where the unseen becomes visible. It is both origin and becoming.
17. Why does Wombism focus so much on language and etymology?
Because language conceals and reveals. The names we use for God, body, and birth encode ancient truths. Wombism excavates meaning from words to remember what colonization buried.
18. What is the role of Luganda and Hebrew in Wombism?
Luganda and Hebrew contain deep semantic and phonetic parallels—especially around spiritual concepts like birth, seed, rebellion, and consciousness. Wombism explores these as evidence of shared ancestral wisdom.
19. Is Wombism African spirituality?
Wombism is rooted in African cosmologies, but it is not tribal or exclusive. It is a remembering that belongs to the earth’s first mothers—and thus, to all their children.
20. How does Wombism decolonize scripture?
By restoring feminine, mystical, and African interpretations to texts that were stripped of them. It shows that the Bible, for instance, encodes womb logic, metaphysics, and psychological truths.
21. What is Wombism’s relationship with ancient Egyptian metaphysics?
Deep. Wombism sees Kemet (ancient Egypt) as a key memory zone of divine mind science, where many spiritual codes—including those in scripture—were first formalized.
22. Is Wombism for Africans only?
No. Wombism is for any soul ready to remember. Its roots are African. Its branches are universal.
23. What are simple ways to live Wombism daily?
• Honor silence.
• Reflect before reacting.
• Question dogma.
• Create beauty.
• Trust inner wisdom.
• Speak from the womb, not the ego.
24. Are there meditations, rituals, or affirmations in Wombism?
Yes, though they are self-guided. Wombism encourages intuitive practices: sitting in stillness, breathwork, writing from the womb space, mirror work, and affirmations like “I am the space before thought.”
25. Can Wombism be practiced alongside another spiritual path or religion?
Yes. Wombism is a philosophy, not a doctrine. It can deepen your spiritual practice, whatever form it takes—by restoring your inner voice as sacred.
26. Isn’t calling oneself the ‘Mother of God’ blasphemous?
Not in Wombism. It means your consciousness is the space through which the divine manifests. It is not ego—it’s humility before your own sacred function.
27. Does Wombism believe humans are gods?
Wombism believes the divine is within. It echoes scripture: “Ye are gods.” But not in arrogance—in alignment with the Source.
28. How does Wombism respond to critics or religious pushback?
By not defending, but clarifying. Wombism is not here to argue—it is here to remember. Those who resonate, will.
29. Is Wombism trying to create a new religion?
No. It is a remembering, not a religion. It does not seek followers—it seeks awakeners.
30. Why are we doing this? What’s in it for us?
Because the dominant spiritual narrative has erased the womb, the feminine, and the African roots of divine consciousness. We are correcting that story—before the forgetting becomes permanent.
We do this to remember who we are. To reclaim what was ours. To offer a voice that doesn’t ask for permission.
What’s in it for us?
• Truth-telling that heals generations.
• Legacy work that outlives trends.
• A tribe of kindred minds who’ve been waiting for this.
• The joy of shaping a philosophy that liberates, not controls.
• Sovereignty over our story, our voice, our vibration.
When you awaken, we awaken.
When you win, we win.
Because we’re not selling salvation. We’re midwifing remembering.
31. How can I connect with other people exploring Wombism?
Join the online spaces hosted at wombism.com. Engage with articles, share reflections, follow Wombism on social platforms.
32. Are there online discussions, courses, or meetups?
Soon. Wombism is building sacred digital fireside spaces—where thinkers, seekers, and mystics can gather.
33. How can I contribute my own writing or insights to Wombism?
Reach out via wombism.com to submit your ideas. Midwives are always welcome.
34. Will Wombism have a podcast or audio library?
Yes. Audio formats are in the works, to bring the vibration of Wombism to the ear and heart.
