Two stylized women sitting cross-legged facing each other with a large lotus flower and a flame or spear between them.

ISA & CHARLIE 

Traveling companions on the path of sacred embodied sacred consciousness.

Finding Our Way Home

After many years living abroad, Isa and Charlie found each other again in Sweden — and fell in love not only with one another, but with the forest itself. What began as a shared return soon became a shared vision. Within just a few months together, they knew they were longing for a small house in the woods — a place to live simply, listen deeply, and create space for others to do the same.

Guided by trust, timing and a quiet sense of knowing, that vision found its form. Today, Villa Vhēla stands on a small hill in the forests of southern Sweden — a living sanctuary shaped by love, presence and the rhythms of nature. Together, Isa and Charlie hold this place as an offering: a home for embodied healing, shared presence and honest connection.

Sound alchemist

Isa Parker

Isa’s work is rooted in deep listening — to the body, to the breath, to what moves beneath the surface. With a background in yoga, free movement, sound healing and creative expression, she creates spaces where people are invited to soften, feel and remember their own inner rhythm. Her way of holding space is intuitive, gentle and attuned, guided by the belief that healing happens naturally when we feel safe enough to arrive fully. Drawing inspiration from nature, ritual and the quiet wisdom of the body, Isa weaves movement, sound and presence into experiences that support embodied awareness and honest connection.

Bodywork wizard

Charlie “Ek Balam” Ekberg

Charlie’s work is grounded, steady and deeply relational. With a natural ability to create safety and trust, he supports people in reconnecting with their bodies, their inner strength and their sense of belonging. His approach is practical yet sensitive, rooted in presence, listening and respect for each person’s unique process. Through bodywork, shared practice and held space, Charlie invites a return to what is simple, real and alive. His way of guiding is quiet and embodied — less about instruction, more about meeting what is already there.