Hi, I’m Tunely Michere
A mama, a healer, a dreamer, and the founder of Becoming Her.
Hi, I’m Tunely Michere
A mama, a healer, a dreamer, and the founder of Becoming Her.
From Survival to Soulwork: The Journey Behind Becoming Her
For years, I lived in survival mode — navigating the silent ache of childhood neglect and the heavy shadow of abandonment wounds. Healing felt like walking blindfolded, without a map or a guide — just grit and grace.
But through every challenge, I learned something sacred: pain can become purpose. That truth became my light. I turned inward, did the work, and began to alchemize my story into soul-led service.
Becoming Her was born from that fire — not as a brand, but as a movement. A return to wholeness. A place where girls are taught to love their bodies, trust their emotions, and rise with both softness and power.
Motherhood
As I healed, I realized there were things I should’ve learned much earlier — like boundaries, body wisdom, and emotional safety.
I want my son — and every girl — to grow up with tools I never had.
You’d never hand someone a car without teaching them how to drive. So why do we expect our children to navigate life without guidance?
Becoming Her exists to teach the things school never does: How to trust your body, honor your emotions, and rise rooted in self-worth.
Motherhood
Becoming a mother transformed me. Holding my daughter for the first time, I realized the responsibility—and the gift—of raising a whole, conscious girl. Every part of me wanted to give her the tools I never had: body wisdom, emotional safety, and self-trust.
Motherhood deepened my healing and awakened a fierce softness in me. As I grew alongside her, I saw the gaps in how our girls are raised—taught to be quiet, small, and unsure. I knew I had to do it differently. My daughter became my teacher and my why. She reminds me daily that this work matters, that our girls deserve more, and that we, as mothers, are sacred guides in their becoming.
Mission
who I am
Becoming Her exists to teach what school never does — body wisdom,
emotional safety, and the art of becoming whole.