What if the very things you tried to suppress—your sensitivity, your deep questioning, your resistance to simple answers—were actually your greatest strengths?
If someone had told me years ago that my sensitivity and my resistance to "just accepting" things would become my greatest strengths, I wouldn't have believed them.
I spent much of my life trying to suppress what I sensed, searching for logic and normalcy instead. My path wasn't a straight line, but a series of awakenings and resistance that ultimately led me here.
I grew up surrounded by different spiritual influences—my mother was a metaphysical reverend, my grandmother was Buddhist, much of my family was Christian, and my stepfather was a devoted atheist. I was exposed to so many perspectives, yet none of them fully explained the subtle ways I experienced the world.
At age seven, I had my first exposure to energy healing—Johrei, a practice similar to Reiki. I didn't understand it, or have words for it. But it left an impression that stayed with me.
Like many sensitive souls, I wanted to fit in. I didn't want to be "different" or burdened by things I didn't understand. So I did what so many do—I shut it down.
I ignored my experiences. I sought structure and the kind of normalcy that would make life feel simpler.
But truth has a way of finding us again.
In my early 20s, while walking down an alley by our home, something happened that shattered my understanding of reality.
Suddenly, I was immersed in an overwhelming field of unconditional love. It surrounded me. It moved through me. It wasn't just emotional—it was a state of being so vast and intimate that it made everything I had ever known feel small in comparison.
For days, I moved through the world in this expanded state. too real to forget.
And then, in time, I did the only thing I knew how to do—I buried it.
Years later, as a mother of two small children, it happened again.
But this time, I saw it differently.
I wasn't just navigating my own journey anymore—I was raising two souls who would one day look to me for answers about the nature of the world, about intuition, about trust.
I realized I couldn't guide them if I was still afraid to fully walk my own path.
This time, I leaned in. I stopped resisting. I began exploring—deeply, relentlessly—what it meant to heal, integrate, and trust.
I studied energy healing, space clearing, hand analysis, and the deeper mechanics of transformation. But this wasn't about collecting knowledge—it was about making sense of something I had always felt but hadn't yet fully understood.
I know what it's like to feel the pull toward something deeper—and to resist it. I spent years trying to suppress what I knew, searching for external validation instead of trusting the wisdom already moving through me.
I know what it's like to feel the pull toward something deeper—and to resist it. I spent years trying to suppress what I knew, searching for external validation instead of trusting the wisdom already moving through me.
The cost of avoidance is real. It shows up as exhaustion, as repeating patterns, as feeling misaligned even when everything looks fine on the surface.
Stepping into this work isn't about fixing yourself—it's about recognizing the wisdom in how you naturally perceive.
We are standing at a pivotal moment where sensitivity, intuition, and presence are not only valuable—they are essential.
What you sense, the deeper awareness you carry, the changes you feel called to make—these aren't just personal. They're part of a larger transformation seeking to emerge.
When we honor these gifts instead of suppressing them, we create the kind of meaningful change our world needs.
The very qualities that made you feel different are exactly what's needed now.
There is a path that only you can walk—but you don't have to walk it alone.
The sensitivity you carry, the quiet knowing within you, the change you sense—these are not just personal gifts. They are part of the shift our world needs now.
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