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Sasha Ostara is a certified Sex, Love & Relationship Coach with over eight years of experience guiding deeply transformational journeys.
She has held space for over 500 women across five international retreats in Costa Rica and Sayulita.
Initiated as a priestess at age twelve, Sasha brings lifelong devotion to sacred ritual, archetypal work, and embodied healing. Her approach is trauma-informed, neurodivergent-affirming, and rooted in her Mexican, Lebanese, and Maya Quiché heritage.
She creates safe, sacred spaces where rebel souls, neurodivergent, sexually expansive, queer, and justice-oriented humans, reclaim their bodies, pleasure, and power without shame.
This episode was so potent, we dove in to the power of DEVOTION for the Feminine Leader and how where we put our devotional energy dictates so much about our leadership.
Sasha is one of the incredible experts inside of The Embodied Feminine Leadership Revolution which you can join here: https://themagneticwoman.com/event
Or go follow Sasha on IG: https://www.instagram.com/sasha_ostara
Hello, and welcome to this episode of The Magnetic One Show.
I am so excited today to bring you such an incredible guest, Sasha Ostarra, who is a certified
sex love and relationship coach with over eight years experience.
But she's also an initiated priestess and has been since the age of 12.
So she brings lifelong devotion to sacred ritual and archetypal work as well as embodied
healing, and her approach is trauma informed, narrative virgin affirming, and she is rooted
in her Mexican Lebanese and Mayan heritage.
Sasha, thank you so, so much for being here.
I'm so excited for this conversation.
So why don't you tell the audience just a little bit more about you and how you got into
the work that you do currently?
Thank you so much for having me.
I really appreciate that.
Oh, my gosh.
I feel like this kind of work chooses us before we choose it.
Just a point.
Yeah, this has been a path that I started working on even before I actually knew what I wanted
to be with I grew up.
I was like, I was 12 when I started just working with the others and doing my prayers and
my dedication.
I actually trained in a sanctuary, run by women of color.
So the energy there, the teachings was about integrity, in constant integrity, the
motion, life as a dedication to the sacred.
So eventually life happened and I left the sanctuary and things, but I was going every
summer.
So I stopped going because life happened.
It was part of the better, but it's like that was just a part of the journey.
The journey kept opening up and showing me that I needed to continue in this path of
devotion to the goddess through life, through serving the women that are at the end of
the day.
The way in which we serve the goddess by serving women, by serving the world, by serving
the earth.
Yeah, that's so beautiful.
And I have to tell you, like, over the last few years, so my own spiritual journey has
been, I grew up Catholic, once or ten years of Catholic school.
Now my parents were not very, like, strictly religious.
They were culturally Catholic, as we like to say, you know, and then over the last ten
years, my spiritual journey has been deconstructing religion and coming back into what I call
like my pre-Christian ancestral roots, right?
So very much connected to the goddess and the word devotion for me.
I come back to all of the time.
And I think that it is central for modern women leaders and modern women leaders who are
spiritual in whatever that looks like, right?
But I would love to hear your thoughts around, like, spiritual devotion as it relates to
leadership.
Oh, that is a foundational, that has been forgotten, a foundational part that has been forgotten.
Leadership should be about how to serve, how to serve those that we are leading in quotations.
It's a sense of being in service, being in devotion and not about being above in any way.
So that has been deeply forgotten, that has been deeply mistreated by patriarchy, patriarchy
took leadership as this game of hierarchy and in doing that, even women that have embraced
leadership at some point started doing that from the game of patriarchy, from the textbook
of patriarchy.
So at the end of the day, devotion is the way of leading.
We just need to remember how to do that from a place of heart and a place of connection.
I love that.
And yeah, I just, with the day that we're recording this, I just made a video for the event page,
right?
So if you haven't had a chance to join the embodied feminine leadership revolution event
happening March 20th through 27th, it's free.
The links below make sure to join us, but in the invitation video, I say, I talk about
how we were given this like quote unquote rule book for leadership and it's the patriarchy's
rules, which ironically the patriarchy's rules are about keeping women from power and for,
you know, for the last few generations, women leaders, even though we had examples of
female leaders, they were using the patriarchy's rule book and thank goodness, like thank goodness,
I'm very, very well aware that we stand on the backs of the women that came before us.
We stand on the backs of the women, the feminists, especially who fought for our rights, fought
for quality, fought for economic and educational freedoms and access and we're at a point
now where we get to throw that rule book out and redefine what leadership means.
And so, you know, both you and I have sex, love and relationship, certification that we
got through the same certification program.
And to me, there's also something like there's this piece of devotion, right?
And then there is something also so fundamental and important about pleasure and sexuality
in terms of our leadership.
So I'd love to hear your thoughts on that.
Like where do you see pleasure and a woman's sexuality fitting in with leadership?
Because again, patriarchy's rule book, a sexy woman is not a leader, right?
It's like that dichotomy, you can be this or that, you can be smart and respected and
a leader or sexy flirtatious turned on.
There's so much to say about that, but I would like to start with how at the end of the
day, beyond patriarchy or patriarchy, there is community and community, which has been
the foundation of the indigenous way of connecting to the earth.
And this indigenous way sees sexuality in a very alive way and I want to give an example
with that that was so, so I have a cat here.
I get it.
Yeah.
An example that everybody saw, like the Super Bowl with this amazing show by Bad Bunny.
Oh, that's good.
Exactly.
That was a masterpiece of sexuality, pleasure, reconnection and community, all of it together.
And what happened there was literally what happened every day in the communities that
are run by people still connected to the land, which is celebrating life in a very primal
way.
And when you do that, pleasure just happens.
Like it just starts from through your body.
You don't even have to play sexy, it just happens, it just embodies you because everything
in this world that will live in is sensual, everything is serotic in a way.
When you see a flower, a rose, a river, a cloud, it's so sensual, there is this energy
that is full of life and mystery and that's sexy, literally, life and mystery, right?
Yes.
So, so true.
And again, I think for so many of us, right, what has felt off about leadership, about
entrepreneurship, about building an online business is how disembodied it is.
It's all about getting up and out of the body, it's living in the head, it's trying to figure
it out, it's trying to like reason or rationalize over our intuitive knowing over the ancient wisdom
that we hold inside of us over the pleasure and joy of life.
And I think that right now when there is so much pain, suffering, like unimaginable, it's
so horrific happening in the world and here in the United States especially, not especially,
but especially as in I, you know, especially I live here.
It can be so easy to forget pleasure, joy, embodiment, right?
We're so overly connected with social media and technology and we are seeing the most
horrific things unfold, minute to minute.
And there's an importance and a power, especially as a woman leader, to be informed and to
not just kind of like, oh, if I don't look, it's not happening or the spiritual and emotional
bypassing that occurs often, which is like, I'm above politics or like, you know, I'm just
going to love and light my way around this.
And we can forget the simple, not always easy, power of pleasure and joy, specifically
as a form of resistance, specifically as a form of like pushing back against all of this.
And that's how we survive.
That's how people from oppressed groups have survived over and over again through the
power of their joy.
That is the one thing that keeps us going.
The biggest genocide in history happened here in the American continent.
It was the millions and millions of people that died from the South to the North, like
the whole continent of indigenous people all went through genocide and erasure.
And at the end of the day, those people that survived and carried their legacy are the most
joyful people that you will ever find.
We are people that connect with joy, that dance all the time.
My father was maddened, fully maddened from Chiapas and my mother with the joke about how
everyone, like even in the elevator, there was music and he could just start dancing.
And that is the spirit of these people that have survived.
We take pleasure as an embodied way of resisting.
And that goes from what we eat, how we love, how we love, how we dance, how we sing.
That is resistance in action because we have learned what it feels like to be always
in an uncertain world where we could go through crisis, dictatorship, whatever is going
on an earthquake.
We know what that feels like and we are resilient because we are joyful because we connect
to pleasure.
And the same happens with African people and the same happens with Middle Eastern and the
same happens with everyone that is in the Pacific Islands.
That is the most embodied people, not because life was easy, but because it wasn't.
I just got chills because I think for so many of us in 2026, especially women of like
white European heritage, there is I think a reckoning happening.
I don't know if that's the correct word for it, but you know, we're like, wait, I didn't
think I'd have to deal with this.
You know, like I didn't, we have more access to education than the generations before us.
We have access to, you know, and yet we're faced with now, especially again, here in
the United States, especially, or specifically, this attack on our rights, our humanity.
I mean, for all minorities, marginalized communities in the United States, and again, I think
a lot of women are, we're naive, right, like you don't know until you know.
And so when you say that, like, joy and pleasure is, you know, this foundational piece of
the resistance, I think of how many of us, no matter what background you have, right,
have for the last five, eight, 10 years, been doing work around pleasure and bodymen,
you know, and I don't know about you, but for me, when I first started doing this work,
of course, I was not like, you know what?
I think I'm going to need this when the fascists try and take over, you know, right?
Like, and even when I got the certification that you and I both have, I was like, oh, this
will help my business.
Never was I like, this is going to be how I push back against Christian nationalism.
As you said, like this work chooses us, and I think for so many of us, we've been doing
a lot of this healing work, integration work, embodiment work, pleasure work, sexuality
work, spirituality work, right?
And it's like all been in preparation for right now, because we truly do get to lead
now.
We get to stay grounded, stay regulated and use all of the things that we have been fortunate
enough to learn up until now and and apply that to our own lives and teach others how
to do the same.
Yes, that's such an important piece of that there was this friend, a very smart feminist
that it's actually a white woman that told me that one of the pieces that many are
grieving the most is that they were robbed of their resilience.
For such a long time, comfort made them forget how to resilient, how to reconnect to their
body as resistance.
They never said they needed it.
And that lot of Europeans had it easy because if we go back in time, there was there was
a lot of colonization that made it just as hard for Europeans, but the erasure of identity
and this, a gem, a gem, a gem, a gem, a gem.
Making them all the same, like just one huge body of whiteness in quotations, has actually
robbed so many people from their roots, their identity and their capacity to connect to
a deeper wisdom that actually knows how to guide them through resistance because our
body knows, our body just needs to be heard.
We know, we know what to do, it's just that we have been totally and consistently abused
by colonization, patriarchy, supremacy and capitalism for such a long time that we forgot how to
reconnect.
Exactly.
Exactly.
And I think for me, like one thing that has just been so on the surface, for myself, over
the last few years, is this learning, hunger, reconnection to what I call my ancestral
spirituality.
So looking at where my lineage is from and what were their spiritual practices prior
to Christianity, right, like what were the women in my lineage doing to honor what all
cultures and societies did, which was the cycles of the moon, the seasons of nature, you
know, what were they doing to nourish their bodies to how were they practicing magic, whatever
that looks like.
But we're, you know, what were they using to transmute energy and that, like personally,
that has just been, again, something that has been so important to me over the last few
years because I think that, especially for women of European descent who get into personal
and spiritual development and get kind of caught up in, like, new age spirituality, it's
very ungrounded, right, like not only is it not grounded, like, truly into the earth,
but it's like not grounded into the body because it's kind of like, what are you searching
onto and, you know, the certification program that you and I both went through is a tantric
based certification program and I recently had someone ask me, like, well, what's your
background in tantra? And I was like, I mean, I have this certification, but that's not
my spiritual path. Like one, ancestrally, like that is just not where I come from and
I don't have, like, I don't have the pull for that to be my spiritual path where I'm
going to learn how to read Sanskrit and I'm going to, like, actually learn the tenets
of that spirituality. So I don't say that that's what I practice. Are there tantric practices,
principles, things that, yes, of course, but like, I don't know, I just think as we, again,
kind of bringing this back to the beginning when we were talking about devotion, there,
I think a lot of women and across the board, right? Because again, we've all been and
certain communities more than most, victims of colonization, patriarchy, religion, capitalism.
There's this, like, searching for, I think, and I would love your thoughts. Again, this,
I call it ancient feminine wisdom, which is innate in us. I do think it's like in ourselves
and ready to come forth. But so many of us have no, we have like no mentors, we have no matriarchs
to teach us what that looks like. And I think that that can be really challenging.
I don't know, I would love your thoughts. That just kind of came up. I wasn't planning on
taking it there, but... How much to say? I was raised as a Catholic too because in Mexico,
that's the main religion. And of course, that's not the religion that I practice right now,
but there's something very powerful about Catholicism, which is that at the end of the day,
the mystics started taking from the religions that they still wanted to practice and to hide their
own mysteries inside these... They kind of folded it in a little bit. I'm not telling you
that here the goddess, you know, here is Brigid. Absolutely. They still have these mysteries.
So what I have found is it's a multi-layer process, one in which we get to see the grief and the pain
that their religion has imposed on us because religions, all of them, Abrahamic religions,
specifically, have caused a lot of pain to women through the ages. So it's the recognition of
this pain. Then they search for the deeper treasure underneath because there have always been
women that have challenged the norm and have been hidden, right? Like, heal their guard. We have
Serfana Ines here in Mexico, you know, that they have been these rebellious women that have
forever created these mysteries. Like, there were a group of non-s back in the middle ages that
actually just lived together as a rebellious act. They intended to be non-s just to be able to live
together. So there has always been these rebelliousness. And underneath, like, that's the second layer.
And then the third is the wisdom of the Asian goddesses that has never been truly forgotten.
But they have just, like, lent the name for other saints, for other virgins, but they were still
the same. Aphrodite is pretty much alive. Inana is still alive. Brigid is an intonation, Celtic goddess.
Like, they are alive. They didn't go anywhere. We just need, just like with the body, to go back
and look into our body and remember that they are still part of who we are. Because we carry
in us the DNA of so many people that honor them. And with that, honoring comes the memory of that
devotion of that vibration inside the world. That's such a good point. I love those layers,
especially for Catholicism. And, you know, it's just, it's so interesting when you're raised
Catholic. And then when you deconstruct and kind of like pull, it's like a big nod. You like,
start to pull it apart. And you're like, wait, this string is actually something I want. Oh,
this string is actually something really beautiful. And like, I, no wonder I felt, I don't know
about you because again, you started into your spiritual devotional path much younger than I did.
But there was a time where I thought I was going to be a nun, right? I think that's so common for
those of us now who are priestesses, who are mystics, who are like spiritual leaders in some way.
And what I mean by spiritual leader is again, not this like patriarchal hierarchy, but a woman
who is like grounded in her spirituality. And that's woven into her leadership. But I think for
many of us, like we have stories of, oh, yeah, of course, I thought I would be a nun. And what
I've reconciled that to be is like that, that thread of devotion. As you said, it's always been
there. It was just pointed in the only direction I knew at that time, which was Catholicism and
essentially becoming a nun. But and so for me, there's been this like beautiful reclamation as well
of like, oh, like my, I remember one year, oh my gosh, I don't know, I've ever told this story.
I even you'll appreciate it. I think you'll laugh. I was in Catholic school, of course. And it was
good Friday. And I couldn't have been more than like 12, right? I told my family, we have to be silent
from 12 to 3 on good Friday. And again, my parents, like my dad grew up Catholic, he went through
Catholic school, but it was very much like, cradle Catholic, cultural Catholic. He wasn't like,
you know, very strict. And he, him and my mom were like, and I was like, no, like we have to be
silent for three hours on good Friday, because that is like when we're meant to feel, you know,
all the pain of the death and blah, blah, blah. And again, of course, I was that dramatic.
What am I doing now? Like multi hour long rituals with Mary Magdalene, like nothing has changed.
It just was like, that was the only framework that I had at the time. So of course, that's what I was
like working out or through. But again, I love, I love the layers because I, again, I think
moving forward for women leaders, spiritual devotion, it is a requirement.
Like, especially, yeah, good.
Especially because it's a spirit and incarnate in this world. Like when we are speaking about
devotion in leadership. So one of the things that I love about the tantric philosophy is this idea
that everything is conscious, not all of creative instances. Agreed. So we are serving the
divine through serving the world. We are serving the divine through serving our clients through
serving the people that we love. If there is not a sense of service, then what are we really doing?
Who are we actually working for? And eventually, what we end up doing is we end up working for
this shallow idea of self. That is, turns into what many people call the ego, which I have my
issues with that term, because of course, it's not well. But it's like we end up serving this idea
of the self that is, that is, that is, bake and that it's shallow. And we stop serving for our
greatest good. And leadership should be about the greatest good, should be about this love
in action. And love for me, that is devotion, is love in action. And what, what other than to do
that through our work, our presence, our, our leadership at the end of the day, that this,
what it should be about? I love that. I love that. And they think like for whoever is watching or
listening to this, if you don't have like a strong defined spiritual practice or path, one thing
that I also come back to in terms of the word of the word devotion is like devotion to my mission,
devotion to what I teach, right? So like, yes, for me, and for you as well, that is deeply involves
the goddess, that deeply involves spiritual ritual, that deeply involves ancestral wisdom and
magic and practice. And like, there is, if you, if you aren't rooted in that yet, or at all,
it can also mean, and I would love your thoughts on this, like devotion to your body of work,
right? Because whatever your body of work is, hopefully you have a level of mastery and embodiment
and like, you're teaching that because that's what's helped you. So yeah, I would love,
I would love to hear your thoughts on that. And you see that, like, there's devotion to the music
by the musicians. There is the devotion to plants to feel like there is a sense of devotion. It
doesn't have to be, and it's not necessary that it has to be about an outer entity, but it has to be
a devotion to the craft, a devotion to the people that we are working for, even to our families,
even to our, to our land. Like, there is this sense of a sense of something greater than us
that doesn't have to be, to be named as an entity. It can really be just our, our surroundings,
our world, our community, devotion to our community. And that's the one thing that I feel is the
most lacking in these systems of colonization. When we are colonized, we stop believing that we
need to serve something greater because the one greater thing is an institution. And it's like
these institutions take the cap and they say, we are the, we are the, we are the one you are
here to serve. You are to be the boldest too. My, my office, my building, my, you know, whatever I say
in TV, the person embodying the presidency. And people start giving away that energy
to those characters. So to that, a record, that master. And when we do that, we're giving our life
away, our life first away to these people that are taking control over the world. So
that's why devotion here is a revolution. I'm, yeah, is I am, I am against giving my energy to these
people that want to feed on who I am and what I'm doing and my energy and my love and my beauty,
and I am not going to feed them. I'm going to feed something greater. I'm going to feed my community,
nature, my ecosystem, my family, and entity, the divine, like that's why it is an act of verbal
useless. Oh my God. So, so beautiful. Thank you so much for this incredible conversation. And for
those of you watching and listening, I know that you love this as much as I did. So please make
sure that you are signed up for the embodied feminine leadership revolution. And also please
make sure to go follow Sasha on all of her social media accounts because you want to be in her
world. So as we go ahead and wrap up, is there anything left on your heart or anything coming up
for you that you want to share with the audience? Yes. Thank you so much, first of all, for
for this invitation. And one thing I would like to share is we don't need to carry the weight of
the world in our shoulders, something that we need to fix every little thing. But we need to
witness what's going on and to carry that in our heart as love in action. How can I love just a
little bit more? How can I in action make it make a change make a difference? So witness, support
and then serve witness support and serve don't don't let this hopelessness this learn hopelessness
take over because it's very easy to allow us to say go to either extreme either just fall for the
learn hopelessness this is terrible for people we're all gonna die or to feel okay I will not
even look at it because it's so bad that it will just lower my my vibration or whatever. Both of
them are destructive we need to witness support and serve constantly which is pretty much what
people in indigenous communities keep getting over and over and over and over and then in service
comes love and in service comes pleasure we are by celebrating life we are also
rebelling against this kind of systems of oppression that have their root on our next so let's just
remove the boot with the dance with celebration with pleasure with joy with with loving the small
things in life so that we keep nourishing them more and more. Oh my god amazing thank you so so
much for being here this was such a powerful conversation and I know so many women are gonna deeply
deeply benefit from this so if you've been watching this episode or listening to this episode
thank you so much feel free to share it on social media tag both of us we would love to see you
sharing this information and hopefully we will see you during the event March 23rd 27th and we'll see
you next time thank you thank you

The Magnetic Woman Show

The Magnetic Woman Show

The Magnetic Woman Show
