Explores how to listen to your thoughts, body, emotions, intuition, and other people from a place of neutral self-assessment Explains how most of us respond to the world automatically based on mental habits Shares journaling exercises and mindfulness practices to enhance intuition and recognize limiting beliefs, biases, shadows, and weaknessesWithout realizing it, most of us tend to react based on our habits and memories, rather than what our senses, bodies, emotions, intuition, or the people around us convey.
Details the best practices for safe and meaningful journeying in ones later years Shares accounts of older adults finding healing, spiritual deepening, joyous intimacy, and peace with mortality through intentional psychedelic journeying Describes how group psychedelic ceremonies can promote communities of mutual support that are essential for thriving in older lifeBaby boomers are once again exploring the psychedelic drugs of their youth, but this time to enhance their experience of aging.
The Grace Window is a contemplative spiritual work that enters the sacred terrain of collective collapse, grief, and moral reckoning—not as symptoms to be escaped, but as thresholds through which remembrance and renewal become possible.
The life of faith often reaches a place where control has become too heavy to keep carrying, yet letting go can feel like loss before it feels like trust.
The ordinary day is one of the first places the soul is tested: by pressure, comparison, hurry, hidden resentment, the desire to be seen, and the fear that labor must prove our worth.
Many believers know the strain of a heart pulled in too many directions: sincere work, anxious provision, guarded speech, hidden striving, and the quiet pressure to become enough.
At the heart of this work is the inner sacred journey through past life regression with QHHT to Ancient Egypt and its Lost Enigmatic Labyrinth of Hawara.
When Prayer Moves Mountains Unlocking Heaven's Power in Everyday LifeWhen life's mountains seem impossible to move—whether you're facing crushing financial burdens, devastating health battles, broken family relationships, or intense spiritual warfare—you need more than hope; you need proven, biblical strategies that actually work.
A wounded life often learns to survive by becoming smaller than it was made to be: guarded in memory, careful with hope, unsure whether mercy can come near without asking pain to pretend.