The healer who built the marketplace.
- Holy Fire® Reiki Master Teacher
- Womb Healer
- MBA
- UMMII Wellness Founder
- International Development Consultant
- FDI & PPP Advisory
- Charitable Trustee
Tera was not founded from the outside looking in. Cadanna Llewellyn-Peart has been a self-practitioner since her late teens — her gifts rooted in an ancestral bloodline that preceded any formal training. As a Holy Fire® Reiki Master Teacher, Womb Healer, and founder of UMMII Wellness — her own holistic wellness brand — this has never been an industry to her. It has always been a way of life. She is also an MBA-qualified consultant with international development work across FDI, public-private partnerships, and policy — spanning London, New York, and West Africa — work that has given her a depth of emotional intelligence, a global network, and a lived understanding of traditions across cultural contexts that can only come from a lifetime of immersion.
She has sat on both sides of the wellness transaction. She knows what it means to hold space for a client in transformation. She also knows what it means to watch gifted practitioners — many of them working in ancestral, indigenous, and diaspora healing traditions — remain invisible to the clients who need them most.
The global wellness industry is worth $6.3 trillion. It has no dominant marketplace. And the platforms that exist were built for a narrow slice of it — Western, urban, already-resourced. The most potent healing traditions on earth are the least discoverable.
Tera is her answer to that. Not as a corporate mission statement, but as someone who has lived this industry from the inside — who knows that the practitioner in Lagos, the womb healer in London, and the ancestral ceremony facilitator in Kingston all deserve the same reach as a Shoreditch yoga studio.
Every feature on this platform reflects that belief. For Cadanna, this has never been an industry. It has always been a way of life. Tera was not built from ambition. It was built from belonging.
"The most potent traditions in the world are held by the communities least likely to be found on a search results page. Tera changes that."