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When you choose a spiritual path for your personal growth, it doesn’t mean you have to become a healer, a practitioner, or a teacher of spiritual arts. That’s just one expression. One of the most important things we can do is to bring consciousness into every area of life. We need people holding light in business, in education, in leadership, in health, in politics, in science, in parenting, in creativity, in innovation—everywhere. Sometimes I look at the spiritual and healing industries and think—we’re so overly represented here. There are so many of us teaching energy medicine, healing arts, spiritual practice. And I’ve questioned that before. Am I meant to be somewhere else? Is this really the best place for me? But I always come back to the same answer: I could not be anywhere else. I love this work. I’m lit up by it. I’ve done a lot of other jobs, walked other paths, and yet I always return to this because it’s the thing I’m most passionate about. And that’s the clearest signpost for me that I’m exactly where I need to be.
But this path isn’t the only one. There are people out there doing profoundly important work who don’t identify as spiritual at all. Some are agnostic. Some don’t believe in God. Some outright reject the spiritual world. And yet, they’re some of the most moral, ethical, compassionate, growth-focused people I know. They are beacons in their own right, simply by how they live, how they treat others, and what they choose to focus on. We have to let go of the idea that being “spiritual” means looking a certain way or doing certain things. Everyone is on a spiritual path, whether they know it or not, whether they believe it or not.
Growth Looks Different for Everyone
Not everyone is here to seek meaning and purpose in the same way. Some people live what others might call a “simple” life, but actually, they are on a beautiful path of growth—they just don’t label it that way. Some people are pursuing joy and happiness, and to them, that feels like the whole point. And they’re right—because for them, it is. Chasing what excites you is not “less spiritual” than studying consciousness or energy medicine. In fact, it’s often the same thing—we’re just using different words. Most of us are seeking personal development at the core, and how we pursue that goal could be anything from travelling, hiking, public speaking, studying, creating art or music, saving lives, leading innovation, or guiding communities. There’s not one method, and it may change over and over again throughout our lives.
We Need Conscious People in Every Field
There’s a misconception in spiritual circles that becoming a healer or teacher is somehow a “higher” path. But the truth is, we need conscious people everywhere. Some of the most important spiritual work happens in the places where people don’t even realize it’s happening: raising children, leading teams with integrity, building ethical businesses, caring for communities, innovating new solutions, holding space for others in everyday life. We’re not all meant to gather in the same industry. We need people holding light in every corner of society.
The Sacredness of Ordinary Life
Raising children, for example, is one of the most profoundly spiritual roles there is—especially in these high-pressure times. We make mistakes. Sometimes horrendous mistakes. That’s part of the path, too. But raising conscious humans, or even trying to, is an act of enormous service. It teaches you compassion, patience, humility, and love in the most challenging ways.

You Can Change—More Easily Than You Think
Sometimes people feel pegged into where they are, and that creates frustration. They feel trapped in a relationship, a family system, a job, or a role that no longer fits. But you’d be surprised how quickly you can start changing your life just by deciding who you want to be. Of course, not everyone has the freedom to flip a switch and reinvent themselves overnight. For some, stepping into a new life might involve years of sacrifice first—saving money, breaking cycles, healing trauma, or building the courage to walk away from something. And that’s okay. We need to hold respect for where everyone is on their journey. But it’s also true that some of the stuckness is an illusion, especially when it comes to relationships, family expectations, or societal pressures. If you hate where you are right now, start walking toward the life that excites you most. That excitement is your biggest clue. Fear will tell you to stay where it’s safe. Excitement will show you where you’re meant to go.
You Don’t Have to Become a Practitioner
Even if you’re in a corporate job, education, healthcare, leadership—or any role that doesn’t seem “spiritual”—you can still walk a profound spiritual path. You can still dedicate yourself to deep personal growth, to consciousness work, to spiritual practices, and to advanced training in the spiritual arts just for you. You don’t have to become a practitioner. You don’t have to teach anyone else. You don’t have to turn your personal evolution into a business. And yet, if you choose to go into those deeper levels—modalities, initiations, advanced teachings—they will accelerate your growth in ways you can’t imagine. They will change how you show up in life, how you lead, how you parent, how you speak, and how you love.
Beyond the Spiritual Industry
In fact, my greatest dream is to work with people outside the spiritual industry—to bring this level of spiritual technology and growth into business, leadership, education, healthcare, corrections and rehabilitation, and those who are lost or struggling. That’s where I believe the most powerful impact happens. We don’t just need spiritual teachers. We need conscious leaders, conscious parents, conscious managers, conscious artists, conscious educators and judges, and conscious decision-makers everywhere. That’s how the world changes.
This is actually my greatest passion, and it’s something I feel deeply called to despite the barriers. I want to be clear: I’m not saying that spiritual technology is the only way to grow. I’ve had many chapters in my life where I’ve pursued different paths that supported incredible development—facing fears, traveling, learning, managing, parenting, stepping out of my comfort zone, pushing myself physically, and overcoming challenges and trauma. There are countless avenues for growth. Spiritual technology is not the only way, but it has been the one that most profoundly helped me navigate the areas that remained stubbornly difficult—being stuck in the past, holding on too tightly to memories, feeling the weight of missed opportunities, and living in frustration at where I was or the mistakes I'd made.
Other forms of personal development helped me at times, but they didn’t free me from the deeper patterns that kept me stuck, nor did they teach me to truly trust myself. They often kept me looking outward—toward validation, external guidance, or someone else’s wisdom. The spiritual tools I now teach, however, have been transformative. They’ve given me the ability to fully trust my inner guidance, to connect with confidence and clarity, and to live from my own inner light. That is why I am so passionate about these tools—they unlock possibilities that nothing else in my experience has.
Having worked in many industries and lived through the different chapters of my almost half a century, I’ve developed the ability to connect with most people and find threads of commonality. Yet even now, talking about spirituality can feel difficult. When someone new asks me what I do, I often awkwardly default to saying “healing,” which doesn’t feel true. What I actually offer is personal development through advanced spiritual technologies—but most people don’t know what that means, and explaining it can feel even more complicated.
My dream, however, is crystal clear: I want to work in two very different spectrums. On one end are the leaders, innovators, and visionaries—those shaping politics, business, economics, education, art, culture, agriculture, community and finance. These people hold extraordinary influence over the direction of society, yet they are often the most disconnected from spirituality and inner guidance. On the other end are those in corrections and rehabilitation, those who have lived through addiction, incarceration, and disenfranchisement. They too profoundly shape society—sometimes by perpetuating its cycles, and sometimes by breaking them. These two spectrums, though seemingly opposite, both sit at the levers of societal change. They are the ones who cultivate the culture we live in, for better or for worse.
And yet, both ends of the spectrum are often spiritually disengaged. The powerful are consumed with external achievement, while the disenfranchised often search for meaning in systems or communities outside themselves. The tools I teach, though, can bridge that gap. They help people turn inward, trust themselves, find strength within, and lead from a place of grounded clarity. That shift is what has the power to reshape not just individual lives, but the very culture we live in.
This is what I am deeply passionate about. I have explored these paths before, but now I feel ready to fully commit my intention and energy to them. I am excited, a little scared, but wholly inspired. Over the last year and a half, the transformation I’ve experienced has been unparalleled. It’s hard work—requiring humility, discipline, and an open heart—but it is worth it. Every climb brings new perspective. Every challenge reveals new capacity. Every breakthrough affirms the light within. And that is why I am devoted to these modalities—because they hold the potential to change not only individuals, but entire communities, and even society itself.
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