PRIYANKA VENKETESH
We spoke with Priyanka Venketesh during a season that had reshaped her understanding of leadership entirely. Rather than describing growth through expansion, she brought us into a moment of forced stillness. A back injury in September halted her momentum and created space for a reckoning she had not planned. She reflected on how much of her identity had been built around ushering in a new world for priestesses and matriarchs, one where women were free to choose, to live fully, to fail without apology, and to fly. In that pursuit, she realized something essential had been lost. “I forgot the most important piece of the entire board,” she told us. “Myself.”
As she spoke, leadership revealed itself not as strategy or vision, but as embodiment. During her sabbatical, she found herself thinking about the life she had postponed in the name of legacy. Vacations declined. Friendships stretched thin by time. Adventures deferred for later. What surfaced was a deeper truth she had momentarily forgotten. She is the legacy. She reminded us that every one of us is the dream made manifest of ancestors who prayed, waited, and hoped for a future they would never see. Leadership, for her now, is living as that dream while creating space for the next one. “To live as the dream of my ancestors made manifest,” she said, “while creating another legacy for the ones who come after us.”
When we asked what guides her decisions today, she took us back to a moment years ago that still shapes every choice she makes. In a visualization led by a mentor, she met different versions of her future self. The final image stayed with her most vividly. An older version of herself, peaceful and smiling, surrounded by warm memories. When she asked what wisdom mattered most, the response was unmistakable. “You are free. You were born free. So run.” That message became her compass. She spoke about the fleeting nature of existence and the responsibility that knowing carries. Life is precious, she told us, and leadership means living as fully as one was meant to live while giving back as much as a human heart can hold. Her prayer is simple. That ego and pride never interfere with what she is here to create.
Her vision for New Earth business is rooted in philosophy rather than modern trend. She shared how a fifteenth-century text by Pico della Mirandola first awakened her understanding of the human as unconstrained by fixed form or destiny. From there, she described what she calls the Homo Luminous. The new human. One who can see the structures of time, space, and matter without being bound by them. New Earth, as she sees it, does not arise from new systems alone. It emerges from humans who remember their creative origin point and live from it consciously. This is the consciousness she walks with and builds alongside.
Our conversation around wealth moved quickly beyond numbers. Priyanka described wealth as love translated into a language humans can understand. While the soul intuitively knows abundance, the human questions it when resources appear uneven. Giving and receiving, she explained, are the bridge. They allow humans to speak love to one another in tangible form. To give is to honor another’s worth. To receive is to allow oneself to be honored. Financial prosperity, in her view, is not separate from spiritual growth. It is an initiation into divine reciprocity and collective responsibility.
As she spoke, leadership revealed itself not as strategy or vision, but as embodiment. During her sabbatical, she found herself thinking about the life she had postponed in the name of legacy. Vacations declined. Friendships stretched thin by time. Adventures deferred for later. What surfaced was a deeper truth she had momentarily forgotten. She is the legacy. She reminded us that every one of us is the dream made manifest of ancestors who prayed, waited, and hoped for a future they would never see. Leadership, for her now, is living as that dream while creating space for the next one. “To live as the dream of my ancestors made manifest,” she said, “while creating another legacy for the ones who come after us.”
When we asked what guides her decisions today, she took us back to a moment years ago that still shapes every choice she makes. In a visualization led by a mentor, she met different versions of her future self. The final image stayed with her most vividly. An older version of herself, peaceful and smiling, surrounded by warm memories. When she asked what wisdom mattered most, the response was unmistakable. “You are free. You were born free. So run.” That message became her compass. She spoke about the fleeting nature of existence and the responsibility that knowing carries. Life is precious, she told us, and leadership means living as fully as one was meant to live while giving back as much as a human heart can hold. Her prayer is simple. That ego and pride never interfere with what she is here to create.
Her vision for New Earth business is rooted in philosophy rather than modern trend. She shared how a fifteenth-century text by Pico della Mirandola first awakened her understanding of the human as unconstrained by fixed form or destiny. From there, she described what she calls the Homo Luminous. The new human. One who can see the structures of time, space, and matter without being bound by them. New Earth, as she sees it, does not arise from new systems alone. It emerges from humans who remember their creative origin point and live from it consciously. This is the consciousness she walks with and builds alongside.
Our conversation around wealth moved quickly beyond numbers. Priyanka described wealth as love translated into a language humans can understand. While the soul intuitively knows abundance, the human questions it when resources appear uneven. Giving and receiving, she explained, are the bridge. They allow humans to speak love to one another in tangible form. To give is to honor another’s worth. To receive is to allow oneself to be honored. Financial prosperity, in her view, is not separate from spiritual growth. It is an initiation into divine reciprocity and collective responsibility.
One moment in her journey crystallized everything she now stands for. In 2019, she sat across from an astrologer who predicted a bleak future and offered an expensive ritual to reverse it. In that moment of fear and vulnerability, a single word arrived with absolute clarity. “No.” That word became law. She told us it was not belief that changed her life, but command. That refusal marked the end of generational cycles and the beginning of her sovereignty. “I don’t think I am the one,” she said. “I am.” That moment clarified her mission to show others that no prediction, cycle, or authority holds more power than one’s own word.
When we explored how she balances devotion, spirituality, and leadership, she rejected the premise entirely. Balance, she explained, erases the rhythm of life. She spoke about learning to listen instead. Devotion to self, devotion to God, and devotion to her people move in a constant dance, each taking the lead when it is meant to. Her role is not to control that movement, but to follow the music without apology.
The values her work carries are shaped by what she calls the code of the Homo Luminous. A human no longer defined by imposed limits. A creator who lives from eternal awareness rather than inherited constraint. Her business, her leadership, and her presence are expressions of that remembering.
When we asked what message she hopes to leave with those who look to her as a leader, her answer was immediate. Courage. Not as performance, but as devotion. Courage, she told us, is the force that carries a person when they cannot carry themselves. It is the voice others recognize before they recognize it in themselves.
Her vision for global consciousness returns us to philosophy. She believes humanity is standing at the threshold of a new philosophical age, one led by priestesses and thinkers who shape not just belief systems, but societies themselves. The legacy she is committed to creating is freedom. Freedom in thought, in love, in wealth, and in spirit. A world that remembers the freedom etched into its soul so that what comes after us is unbound.
Written by: Nic BeeGee | Editor in Chief
Photography: Yana Brusova
When we explored how she balances devotion, spirituality, and leadership, she rejected the premise entirely. Balance, she explained, erases the rhythm of life. She spoke about learning to listen instead. Devotion to self, devotion to God, and devotion to her people move in a constant dance, each taking the lead when it is meant to. Her role is not to control that movement, but to follow the music without apology.
The values her work carries are shaped by what she calls the code of the Homo Luminous. A human no longer defined by imposed limits. A creator who lives from eternal awareness rather than inherited constraint. Her business, her leadership, and her presence are expressions of that remembering.
When we asked what message she hopes to leave with those who look to her as a leader, her answer was immediate. Courage. Not as performance, but as devotion. Courage, she told us, is the force that carries a person when they cannot carry themselves. It is the voice others recognize before they recognize it in themselves.
Her vision for global consciousness returns us to philosophy. She believes humanity is standing at the threshold of a new philosophical age, one led by priestesses and thinkers who shape not just belief systems, but societies themselves. The legacy she is committed to creating is freedom. Freedom in thought, in love, in wealth, and in spirit. A world that remembers the freedom etched into its soul so that what comes after us is unbound.
Written by: Nic BeeGee | Editor in Chief
Photography: Yana Brusova