Why I moved off Patreon
For four years, Patreon was where I taught. Nine hundred and sixty-seven posts, thousands of injectors, a community I am endlessly proud of.
But a monthly subscription does not match the work. The work is not a newsletter. It is a curriculum — modules that belong together, sequenced on purpose, taught in a structure you can trust.
So I built a home for it. Masterclasses you own, not rent. A journal that is free, because education should be. A shop for the templates I wish someone had given me in year one.
If you were with me on Patreon — thank you. The door is open, the work is better, and the price of admission is no longer time-gated.
