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Soul Tribune maternity, spirituality, pregnancy
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Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About the spirituality behind the pregnancy and partnership

What if I could tell you the way and method to find the partner with whom you truly work well? What if these things were encoded in you long before you think – and it’s actually not as difficult to uncover the sacred system behind them as you might believe?

The Mystery of Life Born from Love

Among the greatest mysteries of human existence are love, choosing a partner, and birth. These moments are not merely everyday events but gateways to the invisible world, where body, soul, and spirit meet. Yet in the modern world, we often lose sight of their sacredness: relationships are treated as simple decisions, pregnancy is reduced to a biological condition, and having children is seen as a social or economic necessity.

But choosing a partner and calling forth new life has always been a sacred act. It is not merely the meeting of bodies, but the attunement of souls, where both partners receive a gift and a responsibility. The arrival of a partner or a child is both teacher and initiation: through them we come closer to ourselves and to divine wholeness.

The Mystery of Spiritual Partnership

Partnership is not simply a human decision but an ancient mystery. Two souls call to each other—often unconsciously, yet with destiny—and in their meeting, past, present, and future converge. Every relationship is more than personal desire: it always contains a lesson and a trial.

In today’s world, many relationships are born from fear, emptiness, or pressure. Such bonds are fragile, for they do not arise from the soul’s calling. True spiritual partnership is different: here the partner appears as a mirror, revealing our shadows, our unhealed wounds, and urging us toward healing. Sometimes they appear as an enemy, other times as a blessing—but always as a teacher.

According to ancient teachings, every human being carries a unique blend of the five elements—earth, water, fire, air, and ether. If these forces do not complement each other, the relationship falters, the partners become depleted, or the blessing of a child does not come. But when the elements of two people form harmony, their union becomes an alliance: a sacred space is born where not only two lives but life itself may flourish.

Thus, the first task of spiritual partnership is self-knowledge. Until we face the burdens of our past and our inner deficiencies, we cannot truly see the other. The arrival of a partner is never accidental: it always brings a lesson, always a task. For those who recognize this, a relationship is not merely cohabitation but a sacred initiation.

The Spirituality Behind Pregnancy

After partnership, the next great mystery is pregnancy and birth. The emergence of new life has always been a sacred process: a manifestation of divine power within the body, the re-creation of unity.

For the woman, pregnancy is a gateway through which the soul draws nearer to the unseen. Feelings and experiences arise that ordinary reason cannot explain. Yet modern society often forgets this sacredness: motherhood is treated as a burden, a biological duty, or a survival project. Many have children out of fear, others for material reasons—while the souls themselves are often unprepared to receive the one who arrives.

But the true meaning of pregnancy is that not only the child is reborn, but the parents as well. The souls of both mother and father undergo initiation: they come to understand the responsibility of calling new life into the world, and how they themselves may become more complete through it. A child is not born solely from the body, but from the union of the parents—from the sacred space that love and spirit call into being.

Two Gateways, One Process

Partnership and pregnancy are in truth two gateways of a single process. In the first, two souls meet; in the second, from their union, new life arises. Both test us, both teach us, and both call us to a deeper understanding of ourselves.

For those who walk this path consciously, relationship is not mere cohabitation, and motherhood is not a mere biological state. Both are sacred initiations: paths to self-knowledge, healing, and wholeness. And ultimately, this is the secret: life born from love does not only give birth to the child, but also rebirths the soul of the parent.

Soul Tribune 5 elements, spirituality

In the human soul, the five elements – fire, water, wood, metal, and earth – are not merely natural symbols, but expressions of inner qualities. Fire carries passion, enthusiasm, and the warmth of love; water embodies wisdom, flow, and deep emotions; wood represents growth, creativity, and vision; metal stands for purity, discipline, and truth; and earth conveys safety, stability, and care.

When these elements are in balance, the soul vibrates in harmony: fire does not burn but gives light; water does not overwhelm but purifies; wood does not break but grows; metal is not rigid but rings clear; earth does not weigh down but nourishes. However, if any element becomes overly dominant or suppressed, inner conflict, emotional imbalance, and spiritual unrest may arise.

Thus, the path of the soul is one of continuous balance: recognizing which element needs strengthening, which one needs softening, and how they may intertwine to support one another. In this way, the human being is a living cosmos, where the cycle of the five elements serves inner peace and fulfillment.

Soul Tribune - Pregnancy, Maternity, Relationship, Spirituality

When a soul prepares for a new journey, it descends through celestial gates, carrying with it all it has learned and all it still longs to heal. Birth is nothing less than the greatest work of alchemy: inherited patterns, past wounds, and hidden wisdom take shape in the body of a newborn child.

Thus the soul is born again and again: as a child, small in body yet carrying within the entire workshop of cosmic alchemy. Every pulse of the five elements reminds it that it is not defined by its wounds, but by the light it can release from them—for its own becoming and for the higher good of the world.

Wood

Wood marks the dawn of birth: the soul takes root in the mother’s womb and unfolds its first shoots. Within the child’s heart lives the yearning to outgrow the shadows of the past and to open a new path in the world.

Fire

Fire is the inner flame that gives strength to cry, to breathe, to speak the first words. This flame also carries the power of past sorrows, which through life may transform—wounded fire into pure light, suffering into compassion.

Earth

Earth calls the soul into the body, giving it roots: bone, blood, heart, and skin. Through the earth, the child learns to stand, to grasp, and to walk, while within, it slowly discovers safety and the nourishing center of life.

Metal

Metal is the refining force that shapes the soul’s path: through childhood experiences it learns what is true and what is illusion, what is valuable and what must be released. The sword of metal cuts away the cords of old patterns so the child may walk a clearer path.

Water

Water is the deepest memory: in tears, in laughter, in dreams it holds all that was carried and all that will be dissolved. The child’s soul, like water, slowly washes through the sorrows of the past and transforms them into wisdom—a living spring from which others may also drink.

On the level of the soul, choosing a partner is not merely about attraction—it is the meeting of elements. Each person carries within them a unique balance of the five elements, and when two souls meet, these elements seek to complement one another.

 Next to a person of Wood nature, a partner with a Metal element often provides the boundaries within which healthy growth can unfold. The wood reaches freely outward, while the metal offers subtle order and direction.

Beside a Fire being, the presence of Water often brings harmony. Fire’s enthusiasm and passion are calmed by the wise flow of water, while the depth of water opens fully in the warmth of fire.

A Earth type radiates stability, yet Wood gives inspiration and the desire to grow. The earth nourishes, and the wood points to new directions, together creating abundance.

Metal strengthens clarity and discipline, yet alongside Fire, it softens, filling with heart and vitality. Metal maintains order, and fire adds warmth.

Water could sink into infinite depth on its own, but Earth helps it pause and take shape. Through the security of earth, water does not overwhelm—it becomes a nourishing spring.

Thus, choosing a partner is a sacred dance of the elements: two people do not fill each other’s lacks, but create balance. When one element complements what is too strong or too weak within us, the relationship becomes not merely a bond of love, but an alchemical union, in which the soul discovers higher harmony.

The Wood element does not appear directly in Western alchemy, but in terms of its qualities, it is closest to the Air element

Why?
Wood symbolizes growth, unfolding, and spring.
Its movement is upward and outward, like buds bursting or life breaking forth.
This corresponds to the lightness, mobility, and intellectual and creative power of the air element.

At the same time, it also has an earthy aspect, as trees take root, thus bridging heaven and earth. Therefore, we can say that wood is a bridge between air and earth.

In summary:
The Wood element in the Chinese system is closest to the Air element in Western alchemy, yet it also carries earthy stability.
Symbolically, it represents the principle of growth, creativity, and striving toward the future.

The Metal element in the Chinese system corresponds most closely to a combination of the Earth and Air elements in Western alchemy, though it leans more toward Earth.

Why?

  • Metal symbolizes pure structure, order, boundaries, and form.

  • This is similar to the stability of the Earth element, which solidifies created forms and establishes frameworks.

  • At the same time, the fineness, sharpness, and purity of metal carries the intellectual, airy aspect: it analyzes, separates, and refines the essential from the non-essential.

  • In summary:

  • Metal = aspects of Earth + Air

  • Represents: purity, discipline, structure, release, and discernment of what is essential.

When we place the elements of Eastern and Western systems side by side, it becomes clear that although they use different symbols and languages, they ultimately point to the same inner truth: the human soul seeks wholeness through the dance of opposites and complements. Wood breaks forth with the lightness of air, Metal fuses the solidity of matter with the clarity of spirit, Water carries wisdom in its flow, Fire holds the light of passion, and Earth provides the ground and security for all.

The question, then, is not merely which element we belong to, but how we can create harmony among them—both within ourselves and in our relationships. Do we recognize which of our elements need strengthening, and which need softening? Do we allow another person to complete what seems missing in us, so that together we may create something greater?

Understanding the elements is not just symbolism—it is an invitation to know ourselves more deeply and to consciously participate in the alchemy of the soul.