About Limen
A quiet place for women
in the in-between.
Why Limen exists
Most spaces aren't built for the crossing.
There are spaces for the leaving: the relationship ending, the diagnosis, the loss. And spaces for the arriving: the new season, the next role, the rebuilt life. But the long stretch in between, where you're no longer who you were and not yet who you're becoming, has almost no room made for it.
Limen is for that stretch. Not to fix it. Not to rush it. Just to hold it honestly while you walk it.
Who it's for
Women in a season of transition.
A relationship ending. Grief. An identity shift. Midlife. An ending nobody else quite sees. The kind of season that doesn't fit neatly into a support group or a self-help shelf, but is shaping you anyway.
If you've felt too quiet for the loud rooms and too tender for the productive ones, this is built for you.
What Yada means
To know, and be known, deeply.
Yada (yah-DAH) is a Hebrew word for the kind of knowing that isn't informational. It's intimate. It's the knowing of a long friendship, a long marriage, a long faith. The knowing that says: I see you, all the way down.
The journey is shaped around yada. Six honest questions to start. Ninety days of being slowly, quietly known. By yourself, first.
The 90 days
Toward shalom.
Shalom is the Hebrew word for wholeness. Not the absence of hard things, but a deep peace inside the middle of them. That's the direction. Not a finish line. A direction.
One small step a day. No performance. No platform. A practice shaped around how you actually move through transition, whether that's quiet, connected, building, or searching.
Who built it
Bukola Omotayo.
Limen is built by Bukola Omotayo. I have spent a decade studying how humans flourish — and walked through the seasons nobody prepares you for: a marriage ending, a cancer diagnosis, and the long in-between that followed both.
Limen is the room I wished someone had built for me.