About

an oracle distilling messages exploring hope & perspective where poetry, music, art, and the spiritual path intersect

Welcome to the Still!
Divine: verb – to perceive by insight
Moonshine: noun – an elixir or tonic
May you find an elixir of hope, a guiding light of insight, a sanctuary, and a safe harbor here.
Hi, I’m Katherine — and I was born a dreamer. And until about a decade ago, I thought that was my fatal flaw. It turns out that I’m a visionary artist. What I thought was a curse turned out to be my superpower!
Through music, words, and art, I have carved out a spiritual path, distilling thought tonics that have illuminated my journey toward Divine connection.
I’m a poet, playwright, oracle, artist, author, blogger, singer-songwriter, and recording artist. To me, life itself is art — a living canvas meant to ignite imagination and inspire others to follow the quiet call of their own dreams. I believe that when we dare to dream, we shape our world through story — for what matters most eventually becomes matter.
Why Divine Moonshine?
My mind works like a distillery — bubbling, humming, sparking, and whirring until thoughts condense into something simple, juicy, and (hopefully) deliciously satisfying: a word tonic.
In musical terms, the “tonic” is the note of homecoming — the moment everything resolves and finds its center.
That’s the spirit of Divine Moonshine — distilled light in word form.
Most days, I wake up overflowing with words — far more than I have places to put them. Writing keeps me from letting my thought bubbles burst on unsuspecting strangers in grocery store lines.

No matter where you are on your path — welcome. I see you.
I believe that better stories create better lives. That’s why I distill messages of hope and perspective—to help you walk with confidence in the direction of your dreams and live the life you imagine. To honor the practice of artful creation as a spiritual path.
Together, may we envision and share stories of hope that illuminate our days. And may we roll up our sleeves and do the daily, mindful work of shaping a more compassionate world—one that honors the earth and all beings, just as they are.
In the words of Stephen Swartz,
“I’m through accepting limits, ‘cuz someone says they’re so.
Some things I cannot change, but ’til I try I’ll never know.”
In my wordiness, may you also find your own unique voice.
With you on the journey,
Katherine Fairlight Young