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Healing vs. Curing

healing kuya

Healing and curing are different. While western medicine is obsessed with curing, we work with healing. Healing involves coming into balance within yourself and with the outside world as well as energetically with the Divine. In most cases, illness is both healed and cured, as the body removes the toxic sludge and regenerates itself with healthy cells. Sometimes, as in the case of those with terminal illnesses, the healing simply manifests as a warm feeling of peace and contentment.

I tend to think that healing is simply remembering.  It's remembering that we are divine, that we are part of the whole and that any part of the whole is the same as the whole.  A cup of water is water just as is a gallon, or a lake.

I think it is the healer's role to be the trigger for that memory. To know so thoroughly that our essence is perfection, not this body or personality that we think we are.  The healer's role, really, is to love another so absolutely, that his or her perfection is clear and radiant--so radiant that the client witnesses it for his or her self.

All healing is about forgiveness. Sure, forgive others for whatever they did or you think they did to you; but really, the task is to forgive ourselves of all of the imagined errors or faults or what-have-you. Know that we are each brothers and sisters, despite our outer differences.  I am you and you are me and we are all together.

Your Part in the Healing

You are a vital part of the healing process.  The first step is having the intention to heal, to come back into balance. That is, I think, the most important part. Intention is everything. 

After the healer or energy worker does his or her part and removes stagnant or chaotic energies, you'll probably feel better immediately.  But the more you participate in and take ownership of the healing, the more profound will be your results. Live in that feeling of your purity. Rest in that. Remember it. It is you and it is me and we are all together.

Some think it’s holding on that makes one strong;
sometimes it’s letting go

 

-- Sylvia Robinson