
WellSprings Women’s Center creates sacred, prayer‑covered space where individuals can step away from noise and pressure, become quiet enough to hear God’s voice again, and rediscover their God‑given purpose—so they may re‑enter life restored, aligned, and whole.
WellSprings Women’s Center is a Christ-centered restoration and purpose‑realignment initiative created to serve individuals who find themselves in a dry place—emotionally, spiritually, or internally—after seasons of trauma, prolonged stress, responsibility, and continual pouring out.
Many of those we serve do not appear broken. They are faithful, capable, productive, and still standing. Yet beneath the surface, clarity has faded. God’s voice feels distant—not because He has stopped speaking, but because life has become loud and survival has replaced stillness.
WellSprings exists to take people out of the dry place and lead them back to the Source—so they can hear God’s voice again, rediscover their God‑given purpose, and return to life restored, realigned, and whole.

Founder, Angela Mitchell


Our vision is to see individuals restored at the core—spiritually, emotionally, and purposefully—so families are strengthened, churches are supported, organizations are stabilized, and communities flourish through people who are no longer living from depletion, but from living water.
The Meaning and Significance of a Wellspring
A wellspring is not surface water. It does not depend on rainfall, seasons, or external supply. A wellspring is an underground source—hidden, steady, and life‑giving even during drought.
Scripture consistently teaches that God places the source within, not merely around us: – “With joy you will draw water from the wells of salvation.” (Isaiah 12:3) – “The water I give will become in them a spring of water welling up to eternal life.” (John 4)
God often restores not by changing circumstances, but by restoring access to what He has already placed inside us.
WellSprings Women’s Center is built on this truth: people do not need more pressure to produce—they need restored access to the well God placed within them.

Water in Scripture: Encounter, Stillness, and Direction
Throughout Scripture, water is consistently tied to moments of encounter, identity restoration, and redirection:
- Hagar encounters God at a well in the wilderness, where identity and promise are spoken over her.
- The Samaritan woman encounters Jesus at a well, where living water replaces a lifetime of searching.
- Psalm 23 speaks of still waters—not rushing waters—where the soul is restored.
- Elijah hears God not in wind, fire, or noise, but in a still, small voice after withdrawal and exhaustion.
Wells are places where God meets people privately before He sends them publicly.
WellSprings recognizes that many individuals today are not disobedient—they are overextended. Trauma, stress, caregiving, leadership demands, and constant responsibility have crowded out the quiet required to listen. Purpose has not been lost; it has been buried beneath survival.

From the Dry Place to Purpose Realignment
The dry place is shaped by layers: – Past trauma that was survived but never fully healed – Current stressors that leave little room for rest or reflection – Long‑term responsibility requiring strength but draining clarity – Chronic pouring out without replenishment
Over time, dryness becomes normal. People function without flow. They continue serving God and others, yet feel internally disconnected and uncertain about direction.
WellSprings exists to remove individuals from that dry place—not by fixing them, but by repositioning them.
While restoration is essential, WellSprings is clear about this truth: healing alone is not the breakthrough—purpose realignment is.
Without realignment, rest becomes temporary. With realignment, restoration becomes sustainable.
