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Start Your Healing Journey with Megan Edge

  • Writer: Linda Mackie
    Linda Mackie
  • Mar 2
  • 3 min read

Updated: Mar 2


The Eloquent Entrepreneur — Healing Trauma, Intuition + Finding Your Voice


What if the hardest moments of your life were actually the doorway back to your most authentic self?


In this episode of The Eloquent Entrepreneur, I sit down with intuitive counsellor, healer, and teacher Megan Edge to talk about the messy, beautiful process of healing trauma, moving through burnout, and what it really looks like to find your voice again after a major life loss.


Megan shares how a mind, body, and soul approach can help us stop simply surviving our transitions and start truly reconnecting with ourselves. 



When Loss Demands We Pause

Megan opens our conversation in a raw, real place — she’d just lost a dear friend unexpectedly. The kind of loss that stops you in your tracks and reminds you what matters.


What struck me wasn’t just what she said — it was the truth underneath it:


Even people who teach healing still need permission to pause and feel.


Because healing isn’t a finish line. It’s a relationship — with your grief, your body, your story, and your life.


What Actually Heals

Megan’s work is rooted in what she calls a mind, body, and soul container — a holistic approach that brings multiple layers of healing together in one place. 


Here’s the way she breaks it down:


  • Mind: the stories we tell ourselves, the beliefs we’ve carried, and how our thoughts shape our reality

  • Body: nature as medicine — food, essential oils, aromatherapy, nourishment, movement

  • Soul: reconnecting with meaning, faith, and whatever “divine” feels true for you 


One of my favourite parts of her philosophy is that it’s not about forcing you to “get over it.”


It’s about changing your relationship with what happened — so it no longer defines you.


As Megan shared, the events still exist in your story… but the relationship you have with those events can heal. 


The Cornerstone: Empowerment

When I asked Megan what the common thread is in all her work, her answer was immediate:


Empowerment.


Helping people feel safe, confident, and capable of living their lives fully — not just managing or coping, but truly reclaiming themselves.


This is why her work resonates with so many people who’ve “tried everything” and still feel like something hasn’t been touched yet. 


Going Radio Silent (and the Courage to Re-emerge)

Megan also shares what it looked like to step back from everything.


After years of profound losses, she made a choice many of us avoid because we feel like we “can’t”:


She stopped.


She closed her doors, went quiet, and turned inward — to grieve, to care for her daughters, and to let her nervous system catch up to what she’d been carrying. 


And when it finally felt right to re-emerge, she followed what she teaches:


She listened.


She checked in with herself again and again until it was a true yes.



Finding Your Voice Again

One of the most powerful moments in the conversation is when Megan reflects on a time she lost her voice — not metaphorically, but emotionally and physically — during the final years of her first marriage.


It became “easier to be quiet,” especially while exhausted, unwell, and deep in survival mode. 


And then, slowly, the way back began.


This part of the episode is for anyone who has ever felt their voice dim in a hard season — and is ready to find their way back to themselves.


The Message I Hope You Hear

Near the end of our conversation, I asked Megan what advice she would give to someone who feels called to make a difference, but doesn’t know where to begin.


Her answer was simple — and honestly, it’s a theme that runs through everything:


Trust yourself. 


And if you’ve been feeling like you need help — real help — Megan also offers this reminder:


Starting is strength.


The moment you set the intention to begin, something starts to shift. 



Watch or Listen to the Episode


Connect with Megan Edge



If this episode landed for you, I’d love to hear what part hit home. And if you’re in a season of rebuilding — I hope you take one small step toward support. That counts.







 
 
 

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