So far wāhine have been enabled to develop small businesses and papakāinga, gain employment, buy a home or reclaim children from state care.
Māmā Moving Mountains focuses on the Māori health model Te Whare Tapa Whā - Taha tinana (physical health), taha whānau (family health), taha wairua (spiritual health) and taha hinengaro (mental health).
For circle leader Corina Moses, the "uplifting sisterhood" was about normalising self-love.
"It's a reminder for māmā and wahine to fill our own cups because we do so much within our whānau with our tamariki, pēpi, and tane," she said.
Reweti added: "If we don't put the love back into ourselves, how are we going to be loving for everyone else if we're not showing ourselves that care and kindness?"
"Big questions, out of which a collective pulled together - Māmā Moving Mountains," Peters said.
"This inspiring project was built on the belief that mothers have big dreams for themselves and their children, they want the best for them in their growing lives and in their future."
And the best way to achieve that was for wāhine to work together as a collective.
The initiative, facilitated by Shirley-Anne Brown, was "simple yet quite powerful", Peters said.