Wednesday, March 20, 2013

New! Past Life Reiki Healings

Next month I am piloting a new kind of Past Life Reiki Healings: a series of personalised short stories! The idea is to tune into a relevant past life and use storytelling to illustrate the events and challenges that are being carried over to the present life. The short stories will build on universal archetypes; for example, do you have the tendency to play the saviour, the victim or the runaway in relationships.  If so, how would this link to a past life? I will tune in using a mix of cards, meditation and clairvoyance. 

Past Life Readings can be fun and intriguing but the value lies in the shifts that can be produced in your present life. Telling the story can shed light on important issues. I will also start and end the session by sending Reiki to the the Past Life, intending that reading the story reveals, clears and heals blocks.

Note:The occasional taster reading is available on Facebook Page HERETo be transparent, I hope to publish some of these short stories in a Past Life Healing book. Individual names will be kept confidential. 

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Reiki hugs, Regina 

Monday, March 18, 2013

Giving Up Wheat for Pesaj

I am giving up bread, corn, and other wheat-y foods during Passover next week. Though I am not Jewish, I have been studying Kabbalah and one of the things we learned is the energy of food and how we can use it to raise our vibration. Wheat-y things certainly do feed my gluttonous impulses so I can relate to cutting them out for a week and making room for spiritual growth. 

It could also be a good time to do a real spring cleaning and get rid of things that I no longer need in my life. This could be my own interpretation but I see it as a good opportunity to clean my soul, mind and my living quarters of old energy/food/clutter. Out with the old, in with the new and hopefully lots of good.   

I haven't given anything up for Lent this year (or the past 10 years). Giving up something for Lent always struck me as symbolic whereas giving up wheat next week is meant to have an effect on the energy body and it's ability to receive light. I am curious and I thought I would give it a try to see what happens.

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Reiki hugs, Regina 





Friday, March 15, 2013

Are some people spiritually color blind?

I have come to the conclusion that some people are spiritually color blind. In healing sessions, some clients feel the energy and others don't. Some see energy, colors and flashes of light in their chakras. Others don't. Some people are naturally intuitive. Others seem to have upper chakras that are switched off.  

Seeing is believing.

I used to be a skeptic and it was only until a random set of coincidences pointed me towards an Angel book that I started to open up. Then came my 1st psychic development workshop. I didn't think I would get much as I had never tried it before. The teacher said to make it up if we couldn't see or feel anything. 

My 1st thought was - seriously?

She had us sit in pairs and guided us through a meditation where we imagined ourselves visiting our classmate's house. How big was the house? How many floors, how many bedrooms? What were the decorations like? Did they have pets, children, roommates? What was the view like? She narrated these questions and gave us some time to dream up the answers. It was a mind blowing exercise.

When I was visualising his kitchen I imagined myself looking out a window and saw my aunt's garden. A second later it disappeared and I saw a brick building. Then the garden was back. The counter top in the kitchen was the same granite I had at home. 

Images from my life came to mind whenever the teacher asked a question. When the meditation was over I started describing what I saw and was shocked to realise that I got it right! 
  • Three bedrooms, check!
  • Small dog, check!
  • Kitchen with view of garden and brick building, check!
  • Wooden floors and glass tables in the library, check!

Then my classmate went on to describe my flat. He mentioned a really long winding hallway - at the time I lived in a huge building and had to walk for 5 minutes to get from the elevator to my door. He correctly spotted the white theme with pink flowers. The fact that I did not have a dog (but wanted one, how odd was that?) and so many other things. I was even more shocked to hear his reading. 

This was a great way to get beginners started on the psychic reading trail. In readings you'll often get a sense of issues that might be a little too personal or painful and you wonder how to say it. No one is touchy or sensitive about the color of their carpets so it is a lot easier say whatever comes to mind. It is also a great way to get confirmation that what you are seeing and receiving is accurate. 

Whenever I run into a skeptic or disbeliever who is rudely dismissive of psychics I think back to this experience. I don't know why they don't see what I see, but I wouldn't let a colorblind person tell me I'm crazy for seeing a color differently than they do. This isn't any different. Rather than argue, I'd rather bring them to class and see what happens. 










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Reiki hugs, Regina 

Thursday, March 14, 2013

What's next, Pope Francis?

I have a good feeling about Pope Francis. For one, I love the name he chose: St Francis of Assisi was very kind and friendly to nature and the animal world. He saw the beauty in Mother Nature.

Jesuit priests are also respected in the Catholic world for their unassuming personality and strong work ethic. Their schools are strong on academics and skills development, rather than dial up the religious aspect (at least in Mexico). The update that I saw most often last night on my personal Facebook page was "Habemus Papa Jesuita!"


Nice surprise. What impressed me most was the complete sense of calm and serenity on the balcony when he greeted the crowds. 

Being from Mexico, I have to admit its pretty cool that he is from Latin America. I am really curious to see what he does during his papacy (is that what you call it?). And if he modernizes the Church and brings more diversity into its ranks.

I would also like to see Catholics learn to meditate, feel the energies around us and tune into their angels as well as Jesus & Mary's energy directly to get answers. Let's not forget that Higher Power we call God either. Maybe Catholics tune in already through prayer but the "asking frame of mind" is very different from the "receiving frame of mind."

If I had a personal audience with Pope Francis I would suggest he bring intuitive development into the church because it can really dial up people's spiritual development. It also moves them from a place of "faith" to "certainty." People say its hard to have faith when we ask God for answers and hear no reply. 

That belief exists because most of us were never told that we could see or hear angels and saints by activating our chakras. Clairvoyance make going to mass exciting (have a look at my first ever post, HERE). It is fun to watch what goes on around you. 

Reiki hugs, 

Regina
 


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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

The new pope will be ... a man!

A few years ago I attended an award ceremony at work. My team was nominated for redefining the way Pepsi did business in Mexico. The event was held at a fancy location and a famous comedian hosted the evening. When the time came to hand out the last award, the company's six vice presidents - all men - joined the CEO on stage. The comedian could not resist the chance to crack a joke, saying it was good to see gender equality alive and well at Pepsico. Ouch!

I could practically feel the CEO cringing. Those of us who worked there knew he championed diversity and went out of his way to push for a work-life balance  that would make it easier for women to juggle family and careers (especially in my native Mexico, where gender roles are still very traditional). When I joined the company in 2005, the male-female ratio was roughly 50/50

This was true for most of the levels in the organization. Even our marketing directors were split between both genders, we had one man and two women at the helm. The global chairman is also a woman; the brilliant Indra Nooyi. PepsiCo is by no means a male dominated company, but as luck would have it, both of the company's female VP's had left a few months earlier. Still, the comment stung. 

This memory resurfaced today as I watched a stream of cardinals enter the conclave at the Vatican. Whatever happens, this new pope will not be a woman. It's not because the women dropped out of the race, making a perfectly valid decision to have children instead of pursuing a career (ahem, vocation) in the Church. This is an organization that makes a conscious decision to fail the diversity test.  If they were so inclined, I am sure the Church could find female candidates in their ranks. For example, my elementary school was run by a Catholic nun who would have jumped at the chance to become a priest-ess. Instead, Sister Kathleen ruled our school with an iron fist. 

For various reasons, the Church finds itself in a situation where it needs to adapt or watch its numbers dwindle. Though some may argue that Church policy is not a democracy, its members do have the option of finding a different spiritual path. As a lapsed Catholic, I sincerely hope the man elected will have what it takes to get with the times.

On a positive note, the Church hasn't fallen too far behind in the overall scheme of things. Women have only been able to vote in America for the past 100 years. We have only been considered equals in the work force for a few decades. The Church has been around for 2K years and is typically slow to adjust, especially to new cultural trends. I think it is now safe to say that gender equality is not a fad. 

Personally, if this is too much of a stretch for the Catholic Church, I would at least advocate for priests who are able to marry and have children. They would be more in touch with the pressures of family life and better able to give practical advice. A few years ago I met a priest who only became a priest after his wife passed away, and he had three grown kids and plenty of grandchildren. It was a lot easier for him to relate to his parishioners for the same reason, he'd been there. Also, the Church would be less likely to cover up child abuse if its officials were actually parents. In terms of subconscious affiliations, though you’d think that wouldn’t matter. It probably does. 




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Reiki hugs, Regina