KnotWork Myth & Storytelling cover art

KnotWork Myth & Storytelling

KnotWork Myth & Storytelling

By: Marisa Goudy
Listen for free

On KnotWork, we explore the mythology and folklore of Ireland, and beyond. Episodes begin with a story, followed by a deep dive conversation about how this age-old tale still resonates today. Our guests include oral storytellers, writers, artists, musicians, and spiritual leaders. Occasionally, in our Myth Workers and Culture Makers series, our guest offers a song, a meditation, or another bit of creative magic. We talk about what it means to live a myth-inspired life. These conversations explore our relationship to land and to identity, particularly related to what it means to be Irish and a member of the Irish diaspora. Whether you’re drawn to Celtic culture or the mysteries that linger at ancient sacred sites, or whether you just like a good story and expansive conversation, you’re in the right place. Welcome. Fáilte. Your host is Marisa Goudy, author of The Sovereignty Knot: A Woman’s Way to Freedom, Power, Love, and Magic. She is a myth worker, a story healer, a writing coach who lives on the lands of the Lenape people (New York’s Hudson Valley). She holds an MA in Irish literature from University College Dublin.Copyright 2026 Marisa Goudy Art Social Sciences Spirituality
Episodes
  • To Fall from the Sky, To Cross Over the Sea: Stories and conversation with Kaitlin Curtice | S7 Ep10
    Jul 2 2026

    OUR STORY

    In the Potawatomi origin story, the pregnant Sky Woman, Giizhgokwe, falls from Sky World. She is caught by a flock of geese and lowered onto mshiké, Turtle, whose back becomes this continent we know as Turtle Island (known in Potawatomi as Mshike Minis).

    Our guest, Kaitlin Curtice weaves her ancestral story with her own story. As a young mother, walking a trail outside Atlanta while nursing her baby, she felt the presence of her ancestors. These were the women who had walked before her, those who mothered their own children on the 1838 Trail of Death when 800 Potawatomi people were forced from Indiana to Kansas over a two-month-long trek.

    OUR GUEST

    Kaitlin Curtice is an award-winning author, poet-storyteller, and enrolled citizen of the Potawatomi Nation. She writes and speaks at the intersections of indigenous spirituality, identity, and the stories that shape us. Her books include Native, Living Resistance, and her most recent, Everything Is a Story. She also writes at The Liminality Journal and is co-founder of the Aki Institute. Kaitlin lives near Philadelphia with her family.

    Find her at kaitlincurtice.com

    IN THIS CONVERSATION

    • As the United States marks 250 years, Kaitlin reflects on indigenous grief around the Fourth of July. “Chemokmankik” which loosely means “land of the long butchering knives”

    is the Potawatomi word for the US.

    • Spéirbhean, the sky woman of the Irish aisling tradition, and how Kaitlin found her resonance with Giizhgokwe across ocean and culture
    • Azho gami, the Potawatomi word for "across the sea," and what it means to carry that word onto an overnight flight to Ireland
    • The sacred reciprocity of kinship: why we need each other to grieve, to dream, and to build toward future generations
    • Start a practice of writing love notes to Segmekwé, Mother Earth, in order to begin repairing a fractured relationship with the land

    WORK WITH MARISA

    • 1:1 Writing Coaching: If you are working on a spiritual memoir, or are a wellness professional or creative entrepreneur who wants to use stories to build your business, book a free consultation with Marisa. Learn more at www.marisagoudy.com
    • Learn about our global writing communities, the Authors' Knot: www.marisagoudy.com/writing-groups
    • Follow the show on Substack, Instagram, and Facebook.

    Music by Beth Sweeney and Billy Hardy: billyandbeth.com

    PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SHOW

    Love KnotWork Storytelling? Your financial contribution helps me pay the amazing team that puts this show together. As a paid Myth Workers' Hearth subscriber, you'll have access to Turas and be invited to our monthly Myth Workers' Hearth Gatherings.

    Subscribe to Myth Workers' Hearth: www.mythworkers.com

    Show More Show Less
    47 mins
  • The Village Beyond The Dunes | S7 Ep9
    Jun 25 2026

    It's the middle of the night. A wealthy woman sits alone by the fire, carding wool, when the first knock comes at the door.

    Open! Open! I am the Witch of One Horn!

    This is the opening of The Twelve Horned Women,” from Lady Jane Wilde's folklore collection Ancient Legends of Ireland. It’s one of several stories that Marisa weaves together in our latest full-length Turas episode, The Village Beyond the Dunes, available exclusively to paid members of Myth Workers' Hearth over on Substack.

    The Twelve Horned Women come down from Sliabh na mBan, the Mountain of Women in Co. Tipperary. They take over the woman’s house and make impossible demands. These witches from the Otherworld nearly get away with murder.

    But here's the question that haunts this story: were they invaders, or were they reclaiming what was always theirs?

    In the full Turas episode, Marisa explores how stories like this one teach us about community: its magic, its failures, its longing, and its wounds. From Tír na mBan to Avalon to a deserted village on Achill Island, The Village Beyond the Dunes walks the terrain of everything we've lost, everything we've dreamed, and everything that might still be possible.

    Join Myth Workers' Hearth to access the full episode and the complete Turas series.

    www.mythworkers.com

    KnotWork Myth & Storytelling is hosted by Marisa Goudy. New public episodes are released each week.

    WORK WITH MARISA

    • 1:1 Writing Coaching: If you are working on a novel, a memoir, or you’re seeking to weave the mythic perspective into your creative work, book a free consultation with Marisa. Learn more at www.marisagoudy.com
    • Learn about our global writing communities, the Authors' Knot: www.marisagoudy.com/writing-groups
    • Follow the show on Substack, Instagram, and Facebook.

    Music by Beth Sweeney and Billy Hardy: billyandbeth.com

    PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SHOW

    Love KnotWork Storytelling? Your financial contribution helps me pay the amazing team that puts this show together. As a paid Myth Workers' Hearth subscriber, you'll have access to Turas and be invited to our monthly Myth Workers' Hearth Gatherings.

    Show More Show Less
    9 mins
  • Choosing the Mystery with Perdita Finn | S7 Ep8
    Jun 18 2026

    Our Story

    The rosary has long been used to shame women and restrain sexuality, but what if it is actually the umbilical cord that connects us to The Mother?

    When the rosary emerged in the 11th or 12th century, the Church offered a narrative that began with Eve’s sin and ended with apocalypse. Ordinary women were living and telling a different story. Theirs was a story that was expressed in a great circle, not in a straight line of patriarchal history.

    Perdita Finna unfolds the mysteries of the rosary, reclaiming the prayers and practice as an act of power. What if, all along, the beads are a story of women’s empowerment that’s been hidden in plain sight?

    Our Guest

    Perdita Finn is the author of Take Back the Magic: Conversations with the Unseen World, Mothers of Magic: Summoning the Wisdom of Our Ancestors, and with her husband Clark Strand The Way of the Rose: The Radical Path of the Divine Feminine Hidden in the Rosary. She teaches popular workshops on connecting and collaborating with both the dead and the animate everything. She lives with her family in the moss-filled shadows of the Catskill Mountains.

    Joining Perdita’s free class coming up on June 25 at 8:30 PM ET. Register now for Long Story of Your Soul

    WORK WITH MARISA

    • 1:1 Writing Coaching: If you are working on a novel, a memoir, or you’re seeking to weave the mythic perspective into your creative work, book a free consultation with Marisa. Learn more at www.marisagoudy.com
    • Learn about our global writing communities, the Authors' Knot: www.marisagoudy.com/writing-groups
    • Follow the show on Substack, Instagram, and Facebook.

    Music by Beth Sweeney and Billy Hardy: billyandbeth.com

    PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SHOW

    Love KnotWork Storytelling? Your financial contribution helps me pay the amazing team that puts this show together. As a paid Myth Workers' Hearth subscriber, you'll have access to Turas and be invited to our monthly Myth Workers' Hearth Gatherings.

    Subscribe to Myth Workers' Hearth: www.mythworkers.com

    Show More Show Less
    54 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
All stars
Most relevant
Just love the content of this show - I feel transported when I listen. Just Brilliant.

Brilliant podcast

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.