Sacred Transformation · For Professionals
The most important parts of pregnancy often happen in the hundreds of hours between moments of care.
Every profession accompanies a different part of pregnancy. In Awe accompanies the hundreds of hours between.
Find your path
Find the page that matches your work.
Other professionals
Extend the care you already provide.
Lactation consultants, childbirth educators, OBs, social workers, and others whose work touches pregnant families.
Write to us →Whatever care you offer—clinical, emotional, educational, or relational—it is bounded by time and setting. The appointment ends. The session closes. The visit is over. And families return to the hundreds of hours where pregnancy is actually lived: navigating identity shifts, relational changes, old stories resurfacing, fear arriving without warning, and the slow work of becoming someone new.
The most important parts of pregnancy often happen in the hundreds of hours between moments of care. In Awe accompanies families there.
It doesn’t replace what you do. It extends it. Families return to their next appointment, session, or visit having continued the work. Your care goes further because the hours between have been held.
Common questions
What practitioners ask
Thank you for the work you do.
Thank you for accompanying families through some of life’s most important moments. I hope In Awe can accompany them through the hours between.
Meet In AweFor you
Experience In Awe yourself before sharing it with families.
Complimentary enrollment, no strings attached.
Request complimentary enrollment →Or download the free Thresholds preview →
For your organization
Make In Awe part of every family's experience of care.
Practices, clinics, and collectives explore Practice Licenses.
For Practices →Something else in mind
Training, research, conferences, other collaborations.
We’re always open to conversations we haven’t imagined yet.
Start a conversation →The Work Behind This Work
Before creating In Awe, I spent almost a decade teaching in higher education, much of that time working with students whose lives were far more complex than any syllabus could hold. I quickly learned that teaching was only the part of the work I got paid for. The real work meant helping people navigate uncertainty, grief, bureaucracy, pregnancy, poverty, violence, hope, and change—whatever life had brought through the door that day.
Over time, one lesson kept returning. Information is rarely enough. More resources are rarely enough. People also need someone willing to stay.
Throughout my career, I’ve found myself returning to the place where learning, language, and care meet. Along the way, that has taken the form of teaching, writing, editing, and curriculum design. In Awe is where those threads finally came together.
My own pregnancy didn’t start this work. It showed me where it needed to go.
The work has changed. The question hasn’t.
How do we help people move through life’s biggest thresholds with clarity, dignity, and care?
— Maggie Krug
Founder, Sacred Transformation

