The Cost of Holding Women is not a guide to creating women’s circles. It is an examination of what happens when they are held without discipline, structure, and ethical clarity. As women increasingly gather in circles, retreats, and group spaces in search of healing and belonging, few are taught what this work actually requires — or what it costs the woman who holds the field. Good intentions are assumed to be enough. Warmth is mistaken for safety. Power is denied rather than managed. The result is burnout, boundary collapse, rivalry, emotional harm, and quiet damage no one wants to name. Drawing from decades of experience holding women in both ancestral and contemporary contexts, Guzalia Davis examines what most books on women’s work avoid: responsibility, containment, authority, and limits. This book is not concerned with rituals or techniques. It focuses on the invisible mechanics that determine whether a circle heals — or harms. Inside, you will explore: Why gathering women is never neutral - The difference between social gatherings and sacred containers - How power operates in circles, whether acknowledged or not - Why “safe space” is a promise no facilitator can honestly make - The loneliness and cost borne by the one who holds the fire - When not to gather — and how to recognize early warning signs - Why boundaries protect women rather than exclude them - How to open and close circles without destabilizing participants - The ethical limits of group work — and when to refer out This book does not seek to inspire or reassure. It seeks to make the work survivable. If you are looking for affirmation, comfort, or permission to gather women, this book is not for you. If you already know the work is real, the cost is high, and integrity demands more than warmth and good intentions — this book was written for you.