Weddings, Ceremonies,
Rites of Passage
Meaningful and sacred ceremonies,
celebrations, rites of passage
Before choosing an officiant, I invite couples to pause and consider a deeper question: What is the meaning behind your wedding?
Many couples spend months planning the wedding and only moments considering the ceremony. Is your wedding simply a legal document and a beautiful party? A celebration, a production, a show? Or is it something more?
What are you truly gathering to celebrate? What promises are you making? What values will guide your marriage? What do you want your loved ones to witness and remember?
A wedding ceremony can be a meaningful threshold, a sacred moment, and the foundation upon which your marriage begins. The ceremony is not just the opening act of the celebration—it is the reason for it.
I am one of Idaho’s most experienced and trusted wedding officiants, blending nearly 30 years of ceremony artistry with a calming, grounded presence. As one of the first female officiants in the region, I helped pioneer personalized, heart-centered ceremonies that honor each couple’s unique story.
We recommend a profressional photographer
to capture the magical moments of your wedding.
If this is not an option, Nicolle is an amateur artistic photographer
and can get some portraits before and after the ceremony.
Testimonials
Other Ceremonies:
- Cacao ceremony
- Rites of Passage
- Moon and season cycles
- Life transitions
- Intent to conceive
- Naming/ Christening
- Kids starting school
- Coming of Age
- Empty nest
- Vow Renewals
- Healing
- Retirement
- Relationship ending/divorce
- Gender change
- Croning (menopause)
- End of life/farewells
- Career change
- House blessing/clearing
What is Humanist Celebrant and Officiant?
A Humanist Celebrant adheres to Humanist ethics and principles, which assert that all adults, whatever their religious preference or sexual orientation, have the right to form committed loving relationships, and to acknowledge the significance of those relationships with ceremony and celebration. Sacred Mariposa is LGBTQ and transgender friendly.
Humanists believe that we are personally responsible for the lives we live. The group itself does not share one particular belief about the divine; each member holds their own beliefs about religion. The belief we do share is the faith that we are all part of humankind, and we all share this existence on earth. No matter what we believe about the hereafter, we have to live right now; help others, be honest, be fair, live with integrity, ethics, and morals, be kind, protect the earth and all living things on it.
“The root of all religion is love, and that supersedes everything else.”
~ Reverend Susanna Macomb
More info about Humanism
American Humanist Association
Spiritual Humanism



