I’m Nimo Dido—a healing practitioner, spiritual guide, and community weaver. My life’s work is to create sacred, transformative spaces where women can slow down, reconnect with their inner knowing, and begin to reclaim parts of themselves that history, trauma, and disconnection may have erased. Through ancestral memory, lived experience, and deep relationship with water and nature, I guide women back home to themselves—not as they were told to be, but as they truly are meant to be.
I come from a lineage of seers, healers, water keepers, and medicine people—traditions rooted in the savannas and deserts of the Horn of Africa. On my mother’s side, our ancestors were water women—builders and stewards of waterways and guardians of water spirit. On my father’s side, Healers and Seers held space for spiritual well-being. After colonization and religious conversion, that lineage was silenced. I was born into the aftermath—cut off from my mspiritual inheritance, but always sensing that something essential was missing.
At 18, I walked away from the life I was given and began a decades-long journey of healing, searching, and returning home to myself. For over 30 years, I’ve walked this path mostly alone, following spirit at in grief, then silence, then healing, then breath and in ceremony. My work today is the lived, embodied reclamation of what I lost… and what I chose to remember.
My process has been one of remembering—recovering the truth—and re-membering—becoming a member again. A member of my lineage. A member of the Earth. A member of the great web of women whose wisdom and power were buried but never erased. This is the process I now offer to others: an invitation to return to what is sacred and whole within you.
As the founder of Threads Weaving Dreams, I hold retreats and healing spaces for women across cultures and continents—especially those carrying untold stories, generational wounds, or quiet longings for something deeper. These spaces are rooted in spiritual decolonization, ancestral remembrance, and the elemental healing power of water and nature. Here, we do more than rest—we remember. We re-member. We rise.
I believe that all women—no matter where they come from—have inherited both the grief and the strength of global systems that sought to disconnect us from the Earth, from the body, and from each other. But I also believe healing lives in sisterhood—in the sacred restoration of the feminine, the motherline, and Mother Earth. We are not separate. Our healing is communal. Our liberation is shared.
This session is an invitation. To listen. To root into what our body remembers. To re-member our place in something ancient, sacred, and still alive. Water.