you’re not lost.you’re in between.
Limen — noun, from Latin
The threshold. The doorway. The space between one room and the next.
Not the leaving. Not the arriving. The crossing.
A question, before we go further
Which in‑between are you in?
What ended that you didn't choose?
Some doors close behind you before you're ready to be on the other side.
What hasn't arrived yet?
The next thing isn't here. Neither, anymore, is the last one.
Who are you without the thing that defined you?
You don't recognize the woman in the mirror, and you stopped pretending you do.
What would it cost to stop performing?
You're hungry for something honest. Even if honest is hard.
What is quietly being made in you?
You can feel it before you can name it. A door, opening from the other side.
Yada — Hebrew, to know deeply
Every woman moves through the wilderness differently. Most are handed a map that wasn’t made for them.
Some women need to name it out loud before it feels real. Some can’t speak it for months. Some need a crowded room. Some need a locked door. None of these is the wrong way through.
Yours, shaped by your Yada.
The 90 days
Ninety days. Three phases. One threshold crossed.
Not a program. A held season. Each day, one small thing: a question, a sentence, a place to put down what you’ve been carrying. Nothing to perform. Nowhere to be further along than you are.
- Phase I
The Unmasking
Days 1–30 - Phase II
The Wilderness
Days 31–60 - Phase III
Toward Shalom
Days 61–90
Questions, honestly answered
A few things people ask.
What is a liminal season?
- The in-between. The threshold between one season and the next. Not the leaving, not the arriving. The crossing. Common in relationship endings, grief, identity shifts, and midlife transitions.
Who is Limen for?
- Women in a season of transition who want a quiet, honest space to move through it. Without performance. Without fixing.
What does Yada mean?
- Yada (yah-DAH) is Hebrew for to know deeply. To be fully known. It guides the journey: six questions to help you finally be known, even by yourself.
How long is the journey?
- Ninety days. One small step at a time, toward shalom: wholeness on the other side of the in-between.
What does shalom mean?
- Shalom (sha-LOME) is the Hebrew word for wholeness. Not the absence of hard things, but a deep peace inside the middle of them. It's the direction the journey points: not a finish line, a way of being.
The door
The door is open.
Walk through when you’re ready.
On the other side, a few quiet questions — yada — and then a journey of ninety days. No performance. No pressure. Just the next small step.
No account required to look around.
