The Intersection of Physiology and Sensuality | Meet Maria of Crave Luxe Co & Devour Her™ Podcast

 

Maria has a way of drawing you in before you even understand why. And as you read through this Q+A, you’ll start to feel more of what that is.

Maria led her signature Sensual Flow for Comet last year, which if you haven’t attended yet… let me try to describe it (though it’s really one of those things you have to experience to fully understand). It’s a slow, intentional, personal, connected experience. There’s no performing or trying to get any move “right,” just actually being in your body, connecting to your body, and noticing what’s there. The room is dim, your eyes are closed, and the focus is on having a fully internal experience.

Which is a big part of the foundation we’re creating with this community.

There’s space here to explore all of you. The parts that may feel a little uncomfortable, a little hidden, or maybe not fully accepted yet… or maybe not fully accessed yet. Especially as women, there’s so much we’ve been taught to tone down or push aside.

Maria’s work is about paying attention, building awareness, and learning how to actually be in your body… all held by someone who understands the magic in blending scientific structure with feminine flow.

We’ve really loved getting to co-create and exist alongside her in this space.

In this Q+A, she shares more about what she’s been focusing on, who she feels most connected to, and how she approaches this work.

 
 

“It brings together biohormonal health, pelvic awareness, and fluid movement into a way of working that is both responsive and sustainably lived. It’s not about adding more. It’s about refinement”

 

What is the work you feel most called to offer right now, and what drew you to it?

Right now, I’m devoted to work that deepens a woman’s relationship to her body—through hormones, pelvic intelligence, and sensual movement.

It doesn’t separate nourishment from movement, or physiology from expression, but holds it all as one continuous system—something to be read, responded to, and lived inside of with precision.

What drew me here wasn’t one moment, but a pattern—of moving through different environments, identities, and ways of relating to the body, and seeing what holds and what doesn’t. Over time, that became its own kind of clarity.

The work I offer reflects that. It brings together biohormonal health, pelvic awareness, and fluid movement into a way of working that is both responsive and sustainably lived. It’s not about adding more. It’s about refinement—learning how to work with what’s already present, and staying in relationship with it as it evolves.

That perspective is shaped by the range of my own life experience and the environments I’ve moved through. It allows me to meet women without forcing them into a single framework.


Who do you feel most aligned to support, and what are they currently navigating or seeking?

I’m most aligned with women who are invested in the way they live inside their bodies—whether they’re just beginning to explore that relationship, or have already cultivated a high level of awareness and are ready to deepen it further.

They care about quality—of experience, of presence, of how their body feels day to day. They’re not interested in disconnected approaches to health or performance. They want something that feels cohesive, elevated, and fully integrated into the way they live.

Some arrive at the beginning—curious, open, and ready to build a more intentional relationship with their body.

Others arrive already resourced—refined in their routines, discerning in their choices, and looking for a more precise, nuanced way to work with their physiology and lived experience.

What connects them is a shared orientation toward more—more depth, more responsiveness, more embodiment.

They’re seeking a way of relating to their body that evolves with them—one that brings together nourishment, movement, hormones, nervous system, and desire into a continuous, lived experience, where the body is not something to manage, but something to engage with, refine, and fully inhabit.

What they’re seeking is coherence.


How do you support people through that? What does your work actually look or feel like in practice?

The work is both structured and intuitive.

In practice, it looks like a blend of biohormonal strategy, nervous system regulation, pelvic awareness, and movement—but it’s not delivered as separate pieces. It’s layered and responsive.

We track patterns. We refine inputs. We adjust based on what the body is communicating in real time.

There’s a strong emphasis on learning how to read the body and the desires—not override them. That includes how someone nourishes themselves, how they move, how they hold tension, and how they process stimulation etc.

The experience often feels grounding, but also awakening. There’s a return to the body, but also an expansion of what’s available inside of it.

It’s about precision—and a level of refinement that reveals more the deeper you go.


What shifts or transformations have you witnessed in the people you work with?

Women move from second-guessing their bodies to trusting what they’re sensing.

Their energy stabilizes. Their relationship to intake and nourishment becomes less rigid and more responsive. Movement becomes something they inhabit, rather than perform. Their relationship to external stimuli becomes more languid.

There’s often a noticeable shift in presence—how they carry themselves, how they take up space with ease, and how they engage with others, but most importantly, with themselves.

Over time, that creates a different kind of confidence—deeply rooted, self-held, and quietly powerful. One that isn’t performative, but anchored and very beautiful.


 

“More information isn’t always the answer—this work isn’t linear, but cyclical. There is no final goal or arrival point.”

 

What makes your approach or perspective unique?

I don’t separate physiology from sensuality.

A lot of spaces treat the body as something to optimize, while others treat it as something to express—but rarely both at the same time.

My work exists at the intersection of those.

It’s grounded in biohormonal science and structural awareness, while also deeply attuned to desire, rhythm, and lived experience.

There’s a strong emphasis on refinement with flexibility.

Not adding more protocols, more rules, or more noise—but learning how to work with what’s already present in a way that becomes more precise, more responsive, and entirely unique to the individual.

What is something you wish more people understood about this kind of work?

That more information isn’t always the answer—and that this work isn’t linear, but cyclical. There is no final goal or arrival point.

Most women don’t need more protocols; they need a way to interpret and apply what’s already in front of them. While testing and data matter—and are used intentionally—the internal compass of sensuality, beauty, and alignment matters just as much.

The body isn’t static. It’s constantly shifting, and the work is learning how to stay in relationship with those shifts.

There isn’t a fixed endpoint. It’s a practice of staying responsive—one that requires a different mindset than most traditional, Western approaches to health.


If someone spent a day in your world, what would they experience?

It would feel intentional, but not rigid.

There would be structure, but space inside of it.

They would experience moments of stillness, movement that feels deliberate, connected, and quietly sensual—and an ongoing awareness of what their body is communicating.

Nourishment wouldn’t feel like something to get right, but something to respond to, receive, and enjoy.

There would be attention to rhythm—when to lean in, when to soften, when to pause.

And underneath all of it, there would be a sense of being fully inside the body—where everything feels more vivid, more beautiful, and more alive. A kind of presence that is deeply grounded, but undeniably magnetic—and there’s something undeniably sexy about it.


Where can people connect with you or experience your work right now?

The entry point is through consultation and private sessions, where we begin mapping what’s already present and how to work with it.

There are also immersive workshops and cohort-based experiences designed for deeper integration over time.

And through DevourHer, the podcast (launching soon), there’s an ongoing exploration of these themes—expression, desire, and the way we metabolize our experiences in the body.

Each offers a different way to enter the work—and to deepen your relationship with the body you live in.

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Xoxo,

Maria Luxe

 
 

For special Comet Collective member offers, check out Maria’s directory profile below.

 
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