The anger you are feeling about the world, motherhood, burnout, injustice. It is not something to manage away. It is something to honor, express, and discover the wisdom it holds.
This is not a rage room. This is rage with intention, followed by clarity.
Maternal rage is now recognized by clinicians as a legitimate presenting issue in the perinatal period and beyond. But rage is not limited to mothers. Parents of all genders, therapists, activists, and anyone paying attention to the state of the world are experiencing real, justified anger.
The problem is not the rage itself. The problem is that we have been taught to suppress it, manage it, medicate it away. We have been told to breathe it down, smile through it, and "stay calm." But suppressed rage does not disappear. It gets stored in our bodies, our nervous systems, our relationships.
What if we stopped trying to manage our rage and started honoring it instead? What if we created a space to express it fully, safely, and without judgment? What if we listened to what our rage is trying to tell us, and found both compassion and a path forward?
"My anger has meant pain to me but it has also meant survival, and before I give it up I'm going to be sure that there is something at least as powerful to replace it on the road to clarity."
Rage rooms offer mechanical catharsis: you smash things, scream, and leave. Research shows this can actually reinforce anger patterns rather than help you understand them. Why? Because venting without integration is like opening a pressure valve briefly, then slamming it shut. The pressure remains. And you never learn what your rage was trying to tell you.
"Anger is a signal, and one worth listening to."
Expression + Externalizing
Screaming in the woods, throwing paint, Lion's Breath. The body speaks what words cannot.
Witnessing and Reflection
Your art becomes a mirror. What does it reveal about your anger? What is it trying to tell you?
Nervous System Reset
Sauna, cold contrast, and Reiki guided meditation bring your body back to baseline. This is where integration happens.
Integration and Action
Clarity plan: what does this rage tell you? How will you move forward?
Contrast therapy (alternating heat and cold) is evidence-based for nervous system regulation and emotional resilience. After honoring and expressing your rage, this is where the body integrates.
Screaming, throwing paint, and art-making become meaning-making. Paired with breathwork and Reiki guided meditation, these embodied practices honor your rage and facilitate nervous system integration.

Nestled in the woods of Exton, Pennsylvania, Fox Den Wellness provides the perfect container for this work. The natural setting creates safety and permission to express what cannot be expressed in everyday life.
Woodland setting for screaming and expression
Sauna barrel and cold contrast for nervous system regulation
Comfortable gathering spaces for integration and snacking
Intimate groups for deep work and authentic connection


"Your anger is a gift you give to yourself and the world that is yours."
Honor It. Express It. Find Clarity.
Late March: March 27, 11:30am-2:00pm
6 intimate spots for deep clinical exploration
Evidence-based somatic interventions for expressing (not calming) anger
Lion's Breath, Reiki guided meditation, nervous system regulation
Integration plan plus invitation to annual mastermind
Honor It. Express It. Discover the Wisdom It Holds.
Late April: April 26, 3:00pm-5:30pm
A great Mother's Day gift
12 spots for collective validation and solidarity
Honor your rage: it is not a parenting failure, it is a signal
Understand the systemic roots: the system sets us up to fail, not you
Discover the wisdom your rage holds and find a path forward with compassion
A Mother's Day gift that actually matters.



Founder, Healing Hearts Wellness
Kanjana Hartshorne is a licensed psychotherapist, IAYT certified yoga therapist, certified compassion fatigue professional, and Reiki Master redefining what healing can look like in the therapy room. She is the founder of Healing Hearts Wellness, a holistic group practice where she and her team of somatic and yoga therapists blend traditional talk therapy with body-based approaches to mental health such as IFS, EMDR, yoga therapy, reiki, creative arts, ecotherapy, dance movement therapy, therapeutic writing, spiritual practices, and other somatic therapy.
She leads the annual Body Compassion Project Retreat, CE workshops for therapists, and individual and couples intensives that invite people to break free from rigid systems and reconnect with their body, energy, and spirit in playful, creative, and transformative ways that honor their own beliefs and ancestral practices.
Rooted in both scholarship and spirituality, Kanjana is passionate about helping people in all bodies discover a more compassionate relationship with themselves across every layer of being: physical, energetic, mental, emotional, and spiritual. She believes therapy doesn't have to stay inside the box. It can be soulful, imaginative, and even magical.
Connect with Kanjana: healingheartswellness.com
"I have attended several delightfully crafted activities, social in spirit and vibe, fun and playful, but also a cool, authentic way to meet therapists I need in my referral and collaboration network."
Karen Smith
LCSW
"Kanjana is so knowledgeable and so engaging! I thoroughly enjoyed how informative and interactive her somatic workshop training for mom rages was and look forward to more opportunities to learn from her!"
Stephanie Berlin
LPC
"She is so personable and easy to talk to and has since become not only someone I, as a fellow group practice owner, can learn from but also a genuine friend. Creating a community where therapists feel seen, can connect, can learn together, and support one another."
Jackie Vonfeldt
LMFT
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Open FormSpots are limited. Whether you are a therapist deepening your practice (March 27) or a birthing parent reclaiming your fire (April 26), there is a place for you in the woods at Fox Den Wellness in Exton, Pennsylvania. Your anger is valid. Your rage holds wisdom. Let us honor it together.