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Check Out Eréndira Hernández García’s Story

Today we’d like to introduce you to Eréndira Hernández García.

Hi Eréndira, thanks for joining us today. We’d love for you to start by introducing yourself.
My journey began through loss; in just one year, I experienced the passing of my grand father, my mother, my best friend, and other loved ones. I was navigating grief, and heartbreak.

In that space of pain and rebirth, I began to remember what had once held my ancestors: breath, plants, fire, ritual, and connection with the Earth. I started practicing temazcal, working with herbs, using tools like emotional release (EFT), breathwork, and holding space for myself and others to move through difficult transitions.

Then came the pandemic—an even deeper collective rupture. During that time, my husband and I realized how much disconnection there was—not just from each other, but from the Earth, from our bodies, from meaning itself. And from that realization, Tu Artesana was born.

We didn’t just want to offer our tools—we wanted to create a community space where the arts that heal could be shared: ancestral therapies, earth wisdom, regenerative gardening, ceremony, and holistic knowledge from many traditions. We became parents and so tu artesana has been moving in the slow rythm that parenthood allows but here we are slowly

Today, Tu Artesana is a living invitation to remember—that healing is collective, that wisdom lives in the Earth, in the breath, in our hands… and in each other.

In Mexico, we began sharing the arts that heal, including ceremonial temazcales from various traditions, ancestral crafts, sustainable practices, and alternative healing. Much of this wisdom is offered by Indigenous and local practitioners, whom we honor by creating space for them to share their medicine directly.

Now, after a year in San Antonio, we are trying to cultivate community through breathwork, women’s circles, temazcales, emotional freedom techniques, and by amplifying the healing arts of others—offering a space where diverse voices, traditions, and practices can come together to restore balance and connection.

At its heart, Tu Artesana is a communal altar for remembering that healing doesn’t belong to one person— it belongs to us all.

Can you talk to us a bit about the challenges and lessons you’ve learned along the way. Looking back would you say it’s been easy or smooth in retrospect?
It hasn’t been easy specially as foreigners, even though texas still has a large mexican community, we are still in a different country trying, dealing with a huge transition in which we have to rediscover who we are in this new land, allowing parts of ourselves to die in order to allow the new parts that will help us adapt and thrive to grow… finding a community has been very hard. Being in a kind of survival mode tryign to make things work, the stress of getting our investors visa, making our business work and so on all that hadn’t allowed us to socialize, network and meet the nicest people I’ve just started to met this year.

Appreciate you sharing that. What else should we know about what you do?
I guide people through deep emotional and spiritual transformation—especially during times of grief, life transitions, and personal rebirth. My work combines tools like breathwork, EFT (emotional freedom techniques), temazcal, and Earth-based ritual to support healing at all levels: body, mind, and spirit.

Through my personal brand Renacer en Espiral, I hold intimate spaces for people—especially women and mothers—to reconnect with their inner wisdom, their breath, and their natural cycles. I enjoy holding space through grounding, loving, and intuitive energy.

With Tu Artesana, my husband and I created a platform that not only shares our own practices, but also amplifies the healing arts of others. We collaborate with Indigenous and local healers, artisans, and teachers to offer ceremonies, regenerative practices, and ancestral knowledge in community. That collective aspect—honoring the many paths that heal—is something I’m especially proud of.

What sets my work apart is the fusion of ancestral and somatic tools, the depth of emotional presence, and the fact that everything I share comes from lived experience. I don’t teach from a pedestal—I guide from the path I’ve walked myself.

I’m most proud of the way people leave our spaces: softer, clearer, more connected to themselves and to the Earth. And to me, that’s the heart of healing.

We love surprises, fun facts and unexpected stories. Is there something you can share that might surprise us?
I’m just a biologist and wildlife filmmaker who’s life path just dragged her towards emotional healing and spiritual growth and began to share what worked for her. Biology and filmmaking gave me the gift of experimenting the healing power of nature.

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