Stacey Webb is an Intuitive Somatic Mentor, Trauma Trained Somatic Practitioner, and Award Winning Author.
Stacey uses her certifications and qualifications in breathwork, EFT, intuitive intelligence, and somatic therapy to support and guide people to release fear and trauma from within.
Stacey guides and supports people who feel a deep longing to reconnect with themselves. Creating and holding space for people as they; find and create safety within themselves, cultivating a relationship with themselves, to empower their nervous system in allowing the release of fear, stressful emotions, limiting beliefs, and traumatic events from their body.
Stacey's book, 'The Intuitive Detective' is a Multi-Award winning book receiving the Literary Titan Gold Book Award and ABLE Book Award for Best Memoir as well as 1st place for Non Fiction - Body, Mind, Spirit - Healing category, 3rd place for Non Fiction - Memoir, Personal category at the BookFest Awards, 2nd place for Autobiography - True Crime in the Global Book Awards, Received the Red Ribbon in The Wishing Shelf Book Awards, and was a finalist in the Book Excellence Awards.
Stacey's book, 'Foundations of Tapping: Inviting EFT and Other Tapping Practices Into Your Life' made Amazon #1 Best Seller List in Australia for Experimental Psychology and Finalist in the Ausmumpreneur Awards
Stacey Webb’s Embodied Grace is a tender and spiritually attuned exploration of healing through the body, intuition, self-compassion, and daily devotion. Part memoir and part guided practice, the book follows Webb from a moonlit awakening in India through the lived terrain of motherhood, police work, nervous system repair, shame, boundaries, and radical self-acceptance. At its heart is a deceptively simple invitation: grace isn’t something we earn by becoming better, calmer, or more acceptable. It’s something we learn to inhabit, breath by breath, when we stop abandoning ourselves.
Webb grounds expansive spiritual ideas in ordinary, sometimes painfully familiar moments. The book begins beneath the crescent moon in India, but it doesn’t stay suspended in the mystical. It comes down into the playground corner where she cries while her children play, into the jolt of seeing the school’s phone number appear after Ashton’s kindergarten struggles, into the private ache of wanting to be the “good girl” who never disappoints anyone. Those scenes gave the book its pulse. I believed her most when she let the polished language of healing meet the roughness of actual life. Her writing is warm, lyrical, and repetitive in a deliberately soothing way, almost like a hand placed on the reader’s back.
The ideas in the book resonated with me because Webb refuses to treat healing as a triumphal climb out of pain. She returns again and again to the body as a messenger, not an enemy, and that felt quietly powerful. Her discussions of the nervous system, glimmers, intuition, shame, and boundaries are accessible without feeling thin, especially when braided with her experiences as a detective and as a mother of four. I appreciated the distinction she draws between being kind and being merely nice, and the chapter on boundaries in friendship stayed with me because it frames “no” not as rejection, but as a bodily truth that can make room for a deeper “yes.” The book’s spiritual language is broad and openhearted, moving through God, the universe, the body, and inner knowing with ease.
Embodied Grace felt less like a manual and more like a companion for the slow, uneven work of returning to oneself. Its strongest gift is not novelty, but intimacy: Webb writes as someone who has practiced what she offers, often imperfectly, and has the courage to show the trembling underneath the teaching. I closed the book with a feeling of steadiness, as though its gentlest claim had done its work: that self-love can be received, not performed. I’d recommend it to readers drawn to somatic healing, intuitive spirituality, self-compassion, motherhood memoir, or anyone untangling shame from worthiness and looking for a voice that is soft without being shallow.
I really loved Embodied Grace. It’s one of those books that’s just packed with depth, but in a way that actually lands and feels usable. There’s so much wisdom in it, but it doesn’t feel heavy. It’s grounded, practical, and full of those little insights that make you pause and go… oh wow, that just clicks on a deeper level. What I loved the most is how actionable it is. There are so many simple practices that you can try straight away, and they don’t feel overwhelming or complicated. It’s the kind of book you can really engage with and see results from quickly, but it also has the depth to support longer term shifts. Definitely one I’ll keep coming back to, and get something new out of each time.
Embodied Grace is a jewel of deep wisdom and practical resources to help us connect more soulfully with ourselves. It shows us how to meet ourselves where we are and establish a stronger and more supportive, loving relationship with ourselves.
I have read Webb’s previous books, and this is her best yet. She delicately weaves in personal anecdotes, her clients’ experiences, and research with the guidance and lessons she imparts, allowing for the content to be relatable and powerfully transformative. She teaches us how to accept ourselves with love and grace. There is a lot of wisdom packed into these pages. I highly recommend it.