Eliza Swords is a writer, scholar, and PhD candidate in Mythological Studies whose work explores how ancient myth, spiritual psychology, and personal narrative converge to shape human consciousness and healing. She holds an MA in Spiritual Psychology with a focus on consciousness, health, and healing.

Her doctoral work is both academic and devotional, a process she describes as “soul excavation,” tracing how ancient stories, archetypes, and buried histories continue to live within modern identity, grief, and longing. Her research weaves together archetypal studies, depth psychology, sacred texts, ancestral stories, and collective memory, with a particular focus on the transformational power of storytelling.

What has always stood out to me about Eliza is her exuberance and embodiment, her inexhaustible curiosity and devotion to story in all its forms. She has a rare ability to move fluidly between scholarship and lived experience, weaving myth, creative expression, pop culture, and societal narratives into work that feels both intellectually rigorous and deeply human. Her engagement with story is not abstract; it is alive, relational, and reflective of how meaning is shaped in real time through culture, media, and shared imagination.

Alongside her scholarship, Eliza writes and reflects from the liminal space between intellect and intuition, offering language for experiences that are often felt but unnamed. Her work is uniquely informative and inspiring, illuminating how women relate to themselves, to one another, and to the larger societal constructs that influence identity and belonging.

“At its core,” she writes, “my work is about revealing what has been buried, whether historical injustices, personal wounds, or the deep mythic truths that shape us.”

Inviting Eliza into Real Wealth Immersion is an intentional choice to share a voice that brings depth, context, and creative intelligence to the questions many women are quietly carrying — and to amplify a woman whose work expands how we understand ourselves within the stories of our time.