
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
|

Craig Hamilton:
Welcome. If you’re reading this, you likely sense—at least faintly—that something extraordinary is happening in our world. Beneath the chaos and noise, behind the upheavals and uncertainty, a quiet revolution is unfolding: a shift in human consciousness that is subtle, yet unmistakable.
Some call it ascension. Others speak of awakening. I simply call it our birthright emerging.
This is not the awakening of fantasy or escape. It’s not about leaving the world, floating into bliss, or transcending your life. It’s about fully arriving—right here, in this moment, in your body, in your relationships, in your choices. It’s about living your divinity, not as an idea, but as a felt reality guiding your every step.
Over the course of these five chapters, you’ll hear from some of the most gifted spiritual teachers and channels of our time. Together, they explore five pivotal truths—each one a doorway into deeper realization:
Embodied Enlightenment – The invitation to become fully alive in the body as a vessel of the divine.
Channeling as a Birthright – The reawakening of our ability to receive guidance from beyond the mind.
The Subtle Shift of Awakening – How transformation is already underway, often unnoticed.
Reality as Mirror – The understanding that what we see is shaped by what we believe.
Christ Consciousness for All – A state of presence and love beyond religion, available to all.
These aren’t just ideas. They’re technologies of transformation. They’re reminders of what we already are, and invitations to step fully into what we’re becoming.
Let’s begin—not to escape the world, but to meet it more fully awakened than we’ve ever been.
(Note: This is an imaginary conversation, a creative exploration of an idea, and not a real speech or event.)

Topic 1: Embodied Enlightenment – Becoming Fully Divine Within the Human Experience
Moderator: Craig Hamilton
Speakers: Mike Dooley, Adyashanti, Matt Kahn, Caroline Myss, Gabor Maté
Craig Hamilton (Moderator):
We often think of spiritual awakening as an escape—rising above the body, above the chaos, above being human. But today, let’s challenge that. What if awakening is not about leaving this world—but fully entering it, with presence, compassion, and clarity?
Let me begin by asking:
How do you define “embodied enlightenment” in your own life and work?
Caroline Myss:
It means being honest with the soul contract you came here to fulfill. Embodied enlightenment isn't floating in bliss—it's owning your power, navigating shadow, and not flinching from truth. The body is a sensor for divine wisdom, not a prison. The moment you stop trying to transcend your life and instead serve it, you begin to embody the sacred.
Mike Dooley:
I define it as remembering that we're spiritual beings having a physical adventure. We're not here to escape Earth but to play in it—joyfully, intentionally. Embodied enlightenment is realizing that the Universe responds to your every thought, and your body is the paintbrush in that creation.
Gabor Maté:
To me, it’s being rooted in your own nervous system without judgment. When you stop dissociating from pain and learn to feel it, transformation happens. Enlightenment isn't lightness—it’s wholeness. It means embracing the wounded child, the fearful adult, and the divine observer all at once.
Matt Kahn:
Embodied enlightenment is when your love for yourself catches up to your awakening. It’s not about seeing angels or downloading codes—it’s holding your heart during a panic attack. When your nervous system relaxes in your own presence, that's divinity taking form.
Adyashanti:
It’s not mystical—it’s intimate. It’s when the boundary between awareness and action dissolves. You walk, breathe, speak from a place where there is no longer “you” doing it. Just the fluid motion of being. Enlightenment that doesn’t land in the body is only halfway home.
Craig Hamilton:
That’s powerful. So let me take us deeper.
What keeps most people from living in that state? What blocks embodiment after awakening?
Matt Kahn:
Spiritual bypassing. People think awakening means feeling good all the time. So they judge their anger, shame, grief—rejecting the very energies they’re here to heal. Embodiment means bringing divinity into the parts of you you’d rather not see. That’s why it’s hard.
Adyashanti:
Expectation is the biggest trap. People chase an image of what “enlightenment” should feel like—peace, bliss, always calm. But the real thing often feels ordinary. That’s the paradox. You miss the embodied truth while looking for fireworks.
Caroline Myss:
We are addicted to drama and power games. Enlightenment threatens the ego’s false sovereignty. Most people would rather stay in spiritual theory than face the humility of embodied knowing, which usually requires surrender and deep service.
Mike Dooley:
Belief systems—especially ones that separate us from our power. We’re conditioned to think the divine is far away, or only accessible through struggle. But your every cell is divine. The only real block is forgetting that you’re already “it.”
Gabor Maté:
Trauma. That’s the root. If your body doesn’t feel safe, you’ll naturally leave it—mentally, emotionally, even spiritually. The path back to embodiment starts with safety, compassion, and listening to the body as a sacred partner, not a vehicle to control.
Craig Hamilton:
So true. Trauma, expectation, ego—these are deep layers. My final question is this:
What is one practice or insight that helps anchor spiritual realization into the body, into daily life?
Mike Dooley:
Gratitude journaling—but do it as if you’re already enlightened. Write each day as a creator, not a seeker. “Today, I moved through the world as a divine being in human disguise.” That rewires everything.
Gabor Maté:
Simple breath awareness. Sit quietly and feel your breath without trying to change it. Then notice what arises in your body. Name it. Welcome it. That’s presence. Over time, you learn to inhabit the body like a wise old home.
Caroline Myss:
Service. Find one person to help every day—anonymously if possible. When you turn your attention outward, divinity moves through you. It’s not about being a spiritual star—it’s about being a lighthouse without needing applause.
Adyashanti:
Slow down. When you walk, feel each step. When you speak, listen to the silence between words. This moment is your teacher. Embodiment happens not through effort, but through unresisting attention.
Matt Kahn:
Speak to yourself like someone you love. “I hear you. I see you. I’m here.” That voice becomes the divine landing in form. And over time, your nervous system stops flinching—and starts trusting your own presence.
Craig Hamilton (Final Thoughts):
What I hear in all of you is a call to remember that awakening doesn’t end with insight—it begins there. And it finds its true power not in visions, but in how we sit with discomfort, speak to ourselves, and walk the world.
When the divine doesn’t hover above us but moves through us, we know we’re living not just awakened—but embodied.
Let’s stay with that. Not just today—but with every breath.
Topic 2: Channeling Is Your Birthright – Awakening the Inner Frequency
Moderator: Lee Harris
Speakers: Darryl Anka, Lyssa Royal Holt, Esther Hicks, Paul Selig, Sara Landon
Lee Harris (Moderator):
Channeling. For some, it sounds mystical or even impossible—reserved for psychics or sages. But more and more people are realizing it’s not only real… it’s natural. It’s your birthright.
Let’s begin with this:
What does “channeling” truly mean to you—and how would you explain it to someone who’s never experienced it?
Sara Landon:
Channeling is listening. Deep listening. When I channel The Council, I’m not possessed—I’m deeply present. It’s as if I’m translating a frequency of love, wisdom, and truth that’s already here. Everyone can tune in—because Source is speaking to all of us, all the time.
Darryl Anka:
It’s about getting out of your own way. I channel Bashar, a multidimensional being, but it’s really about permission—allowing another level of consciousness to speak through me. You don’t lose yourself. You expand into more of what’s possible.
Paul Selig:
It’s reception. Imagine standing still long enough in silence that you start hearing a whisper. That whisper is truth—untainted by ego or fear. My work with the Guides involves surrender, but also responsibility. The channel is only as clear as the vessel is honest.
Esther Hicks:
I just call it “getting into the vortex.” When I channel Abraham, I feel joy, clarity, humor—it feels like home. And anyone can get there. If you’ve ever had a sudden solution pop into your mind or felt an urge that led you perfectly—guess what? That’s channeling.
Lyssa Royal Holt:
Channeling is not a talent, it’s a frequency. We are all antennas. The Pleiadians I work with aren’t “out there”—they’re energy signatures tuned to the vibration of truth, unity, and compassion. Channeling means resonating with those fields and becoming their voice.
Lee Harris:
Beautiful. So if this is natural, why do so many people block it?
What’s the biggest reason most people don’t believe they can channel—or don’t even try?
Esther Hicks:
Because we’ve been taught not to trust our feelings. But feelings are the compass. If you feel joy, lightness, excitement—that’s the door to higher intelligence. But people think intuition is silly, or that it’s “just them.” They don't realize that is the signal.
Paul Selig:
Fear. Fear of being wrong. Fear of being judged. Fear of being overtaken. But the real fear is that the voice they hear might ask them to change. And we don’t like change. But transformation is the currency of awakening.
Lyssa Royal Holt:
We’ve forgotten how to be still. People want channeling to be loud, dramatic, obvious. But it often starts as a whisper, a nudge, a dream. Modern life is so noisy that we don’t recognize these subtle openings anymore.
Sara Landon:
They don’t feel worthy. Somewhere deep down, they believe that higher wisdom is for other people. But Source doesn’t choose favorites. It doesn’t need credentials. All it asks is a willing heart and an open mind.
Darryl Anka:
Because they overcomplicate it. Channeling isn’t always about talking to aliens or spirits. It can be your future self. It can be the version of you who knows what’s best. We block it by thinking we need to “do it right,” instead of just doing it sincerely.
Lee Harris:
That’s an important shift—from specialness to sincerity. So let’s ground this in practice.
What’s one simple thing anyone can do today to begin tuning in to higher guidance?
Lyssa Royal Holt:
Start with dreams. Before bed, ask a question—out loud. Then in the morning, write whatever comes, even if it makes no sense. You’re opening a portal. Over time, the signal strengthens. It’s not magic. It’s repetition.
Darryl Anka:
Create a “channeling chair.” Sit in the same place each day, breathe, and imagine that the most loving version of you is nearby. Ask a question. Speak aloud the first answer you hear or feel. It might sound like you—but trust it.
Sara Landon:
Ask this: “What would love say to me right now?” And then listen. The answer may arrive as a sentence, a song lyric, or even tears. That’s your channel opening. Love is the most powerful frequency you can ever receive or transmit.
Esther Hicks:
Appreciation. Just go outside and say thank you—for the wind, the trees, the breath in your lungs. That vibration automatically tunes you in. It’s not about trying harder—it’s about feeling better.
Paul Selig:
Sit in stillness and speak the words: “I am willing to be known.” Then wait. You’ll start to sense something—not from above you, but within. That’s the presence of the divine intelligence already living in you, waiting to speak.
Lee Harris (Final Thoughts):
What I love about what each of you shared is this: Channeling isn’t performance. It’s intimacy. It’s not about accessing some cosmic hotline—it’s about remembering that you are already part of the signal. The transmitter and the receiver are the same being.
Whether you speak as Abraham, Bashar, the Guides, or simply your highest self… the message is clear:
You were never disconnected. You only stopped listening.
Let this be the moment you begin again.
Topic 3: The Great Awakening Is Already Here – Recognizing the Subtle Shift
Moderator: Michael Beckwith
Speakers: Gregg Braden, Jean Houston, Barbara Marx Hubbard, Joe Dispenza, Sadhguru
Michael Beckwith (Moderator):
Many people are waiting for a sign—some massive cosmic event or breaking news bulletin—to declare “The Great Awakening has begun.” But what if the signs are already here, just quieter than we expected?
Today, I invite each of you to help illuminate this:
How do you recognize the signs that humanity is already in the middle of a Great Awakening?
Joe Dispenza:
The data is right in front of us. Millions are meditating, rewiring their brains, stepping out of victim consciousness. We now see scientific proof that people can change their biology with thought alone. That's no small thing. It's evolutionary. Quietly revolutionary.
Jean Houston:
We are witnessing the early stages of what I call “The Possible Human.” When people feel an itch for meaning, when they reject numbness and long for connection, something is stirring. The awakening is subtle—but it’s cellular, cultural, and collective.
Gregg Braden:
Look at the breakdown of systems—governments, economies, ideologies. These aren't signs of destruction; they’re birth pangs. Nature doesn't evolve through comfort. We are witnessing humanity shedding old skin to activate our heart-based intelligence.
Sadhguru:
People are asking deeper questions now—not “What should I do today?” but “What am I doing here?” The thirst for truth, not entertainment, is a subtle yet powerful shift. Awakening is not drama. It's clarity. It’s fire without smoke.
Barbara Marx Hubbard:
Conscious evolution is no longer a theory—it’s practice. Small communities are organizing around oneness, love, and higher purpose. These aren’t headlines, but they are seeds. And evolution always begins in the invisible.
Michael Beckwith:
That’s beautifully said. So now I want to ask:
If this awakening is real, why do so many people still feel disconnected, hopeless, or unaware of it?
Jean Houston:
Because the old story still has a tight grip. People are saturated in narratives of fear, separation, and scarcity. Awakening feels foreign when you’ve spent a lifetime asleep. But even the desire to question that narrative is a sign that you’ve begun.
Gregg Braden:
We are trained to look outside ourselves for validation. Media, politics, even religion can distort our inner compass. Awakening doesn’t scream—it whispers. Unless you slow down and turn inward, you miss the new operating system quietly installing itself.
Sadhguru:
Because awakening doesn't eliminate suffering—it reveals the meaning behind it. People expect awakening to feel like ecstasy. But often, the first stages feel like disillusionment. That’s part of it. You’re shedding illusions, not gaining fantasies.
Barbara Marx Hubbard:
Some are still coded to the frequency of survival, not thrival. But when the longing for purpose surpasses the fear of change, a new identity starts to emerge. It takes time. Think of it as a soul adolescence before maturity arrives.
Joe Dispenza:
Because we’re biologically addicted to the familiar—even if it hurts. Neural patterns wired by stress, shame, or lack don’t go away overnight. But the moment someone experiences a true moment of gratitude or coherence, they taste what's possible—and that’s irreversible.
Michael Beckwith:
So powerful. And that brings me to our final question:
What’s one thing anyone can do today to become more aware of—and participate in—this awakening process?
Barbara Marx Hubbard:
Find your “vocational arousal.” What makes you come alive with love and vision? That’s your path into the awakening. You don’t have to change the world. You just have to embody your deepest yes. The rest ripples outward.
Gregg Braden:
Reconnect with nature. The Earth is part of this awakening—and she’s speaking constantly. Sit in stillness, barefoot on the soil, and ask a question. The answer may not come in words, but it will shift your nervous system.
Joe Dispenza:
Begin the day with intention. Before you get out of bed, imagine who you want to be—not based on your past, but based on your highest possibility. When your brain believes it’s real, your body follows. That’s participation in awakening.
Jean Houston:
Read poetry. Yes, really. Art is the language of the soul. Let beauty rewire you. Let wonder disrupt your numbness. Awakening isn’t just spiritual—it’s creative, sensual, even playful. Don’t just think your way to awakening—feel it.
Sadhguru:
Breathe consciously. That’s it. Watch your breath five times a day. It will anchor you in presence. The present is where all awakening lives. If you miss this moment, you miss the miracle.
Michael Beckwith (Final Thoughts):
What I love about each of your insights is the reminder that awakening isn’t something we wait for—it’s something we live into. Not by escaping the world, but by saying yes to it in a deeper way.
So if anyone listening still wonders where the Great Awakening is…
Look at the question you're asking.
That is the awakening.
Topic 4: Reality Is a Mirror – Your Beliefs Shape Your World
Moderator: Vishen Lakhiani
Speakers: Mike Dooley, Neville Goddard (via historical quotes), Byron Katie, Rupert Spira, Florence Scovel Shinn (via legacy insights)
Vishen Lakhiani (Moderator):
The idea that your beliefs create your reality sounds inspiring… until life throws something painful your way. Today, I want to go deeper. What does it truly mean to say that the outer world is a mirror of the inner?
Let’s start here:
When you say “thoughts create reality” or “life is a mirror,” what do you really mean—and what is commonly misunderstood?
Rupert Spira:
It doesn’t mean thoughts magically make things appear. It means the quality of your experience—how you perceive and interact with reality—is filtered through your beliefs. If you believe you are incomplete, the world reflects that back in ten thousand ways. Change the belief, and the world shifts—not because it obeys you, but because you finally see it clearly.
Florence Scovel Shinn (legacy quote):
“Your word is your wand.” People underestimate the power of speech and inner conviction. What you feel and expect creates your circumstances. Most people speak doubt and fear into the ethers and are shocked when it returns as reality.
Mike Dooley:
What people miss is that the Universe responds more to your vibration than your words. You can say affirmations all day, but if you feel unworthy underneath, that’s the signal you’re sending. It’s not punishment—it’s a cosmic feedback system saying, “Look here. Align this.”
Byron Katie:
Everything you believe, unquestioned, becomes your world. If you think people are selfish, you’ll find examples everywhere. If you think the world is kind, you’ll start noticing acts of grace. The shift happens not by changing the world—but by investigating your story about it.
Neville Goddard (historical quote):
“Assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled.” That is the seed of manifestation. The world is your mirror—not of what you say you want, but of what you truly accept as real. Belief is not weak hope. It is embodied certainty.
Vishen Lakhiani:
So if reality reflects belief, that raises a tough question…
Why do people manifest unwanted situations or repeat painful patterns—despite spiritual awareness or good intentions?
Mike Dooley:
Because intention isn’t enough. Most people unintentionally focus on what they fear or lack. Even while visualizing abundance, they’re emotionally entangled in scarcity. The Universe listens to emotion. That’s the true broadcast signal.
Florence Scovel Shinn (paraphrased):
They speak from fear instead of faith. They ask but then cancel the request with doubt. Or they hold grudges, which block blessings. Resentment is like slamming a door on answered prayers.
Rupert Spira:
Because unconscious conditioning runs the show. You may consciously affirm peace, but if your nervous system is wired to expect chaos, you will unconsciously recreate chaos. Freedom begins by making the unconscious conscious—gently, without judgment.
Neville Goddard (quote):
“You rise to the level of your assumptions.” People fail to change their reality because they try to force outer change without altering their inner self-image. You must live from the state of the wish fulfilled—not just visit it occasionally in meditation.
Byron Katie:
We believe our stressful thoughts. “I’ll never be enough.” “They don’t care about me.” These thoughts go unquestioned and create suffering. Inquiry is the doorway. The Work is not about affirming positivity—it’s about removing the veil.
Vishen Lakhiani:
That’s honest and empowering. So to wrap up…
What is one practice that helps align your inner world to a reality you actually want to live in?
Byron Katie:
Ask: “Is it true?” Every time a stressful thought arises, question it. When your mind becomes clear, your world softens. The Work isn’t magic—it’s awareness. Peace is the real manifestation.
Neville Goddard (paraphrased):
Before sleep, enter a state akin to sleep (SATS), and imagine yourself living the life you desire. Feel it as real. See through those eyes. Do not beg the Universe—assume it is done.
Mike Dooley:
Start your day with five minutes of “end result visualization.” Picture the feelings of your dream life—joy, freedom, love—not just the stuff. Do it playfully. The Universe thrives on enthusiasm.
Florence Scovel Shinn (legacy advice):
Speak affirmations with feeling. Say: “I cast this burden onto the Christ within and go free.” It’s not just words—it’s surrender. Align your words with Divine Law, and the outer will rearrange accordingly.
Rupert Spira:
Sit quietly and ask, “What is aware of this thought?” When you touch that place of pure awareness, the mind quiets. From there, your actions and responses arise from presence—not reactivity. That presence is the foundation of all transformation.
Vishen Lakhiani (Final Thoughts):
Each of you points to a deeper truth: Reality doesn’t punish or reward—it reflects. Not as judgment, but as opportunity.
To see your world as a mirror is not narcissism—it’s freedom. It means you have influence—not total control, but deep participation.
And if that’s true… then every moment becomes an invitation.
To see clearly.
To choose differently.
To live intentionally.
Let the mirror show you not what’s wrong—but what wants to heal.
Topic 5: Christ Consciousness for All – A Frequency of Love, Not Religion
Moderator: Father Richard Rohr
Speakers: Yeshua (channeled via Tina Louise Spalding), Marianne Williamson, Eckhart Tolle, Neale Donald Walsch, Panache Desai
Father Richard Rohr (Moderator):
Too often, the term Christ Consciousness is confined to religion, doctrine, or iconography. But what if it's something bigger—something universal?
A state of being rooted not in belief systems, but in love, unity, and divine identity?
Let’s begin with a foundational question:
What does “Christ Consciousness” mean to you—and why is it relevant to everyone, regardless of religion?
Panache Desai:
To me, Christ Consciousness is the frequency of unconditional love. It’s not about Jesus the man, but the divine field he embodied. That consciousness lives in all of us. It's what remains when we strip away fear, shame, and separation.
Yeshua (channeled via Tina Louise Spalding):
Christ Consciousness is your natural state. It’s not mine alone—it’s yours. It is awareness of your eternal connection to Source and your brothers and sisters. You are not meant to worship me, but to realize what I realized.
Eckhart Tolle:
It is presence. When you are fully in the now, without resistance or identity, you touch the stillness that Jesus lived from. Christ Consciousness is not a future attainment—it is what reveals itself when the ego dissolves.
Marianne Williamson:
Christ Consciousness is love thinking. It’s what A Course in Miracles teaches: a shift from fear to love in every moment. It transcends doctrine and unites us in spiritual purpose. It’s Jesus without dogma—as a model of inner sovereignty.
Neale Donald Walsch:
Christ Consciousness is the awareness that you are one with everything. It is remembering that separation is the illusion. God speaks to you as you, not just through ancient texts. This awareness is our destiny, not a myth.
Father Richard Rohr:
That’s a powerful reframing. Now let’s go deeper.
What keeps people from recognizing or embodying this Christ-like presence in themselves and others?
Eckhart Tolle:
The mind’s addiction to form. Most people believe they are their story, their thoughts, their pain. Christ Consciousness asks you to disidentify from all of that. The ego fears this, so it resists by clinging to identity.
Marianne Williamson:
Religious trauma. People have been hurt by the misuse of Christ’s name—through judgment, exclusion, fear. So they recoil from the very thing that could heal them. We must reclaim Jesus not as a gatekeeper, but as a way-shower.
Yeshua (channeled):
Because they believe they are unworthy. Religion taught separation, guilt, and punishment. But awakening begins when you accept that you are already holy. I came not to condemn, but to remind you of your divine inheritance.
Panache Desai:
Most of us carry cellular memory of unworthiness. Christ Consciousness activates when we allow ourselves to be fully seen, fully loved, as we are. The resistance isn’t to God—it’s to intimacy with ourselves.
Neale Donald Walsch:
Because we’ve mistaken divinity for hierarchy. We think God is “above,” and we are “below.” But Christ didn’t teach that. He taught oneness. Until we undo the God-above-man illusion, we will never see ourselves as divine partners.
Father Richard Rohr:
This leads to my final question—and I ask you to speak both practically and spiritually:
What is one way people can begin to experience Christ Consciousness in their daily lives?
Yeshua (channeled):
Offer forgiveness—not as a favor, but as liberation. Start with yourself. Let go of the weight you’ve carried. Then extend that grace to others. That is Christ Consciousness: the end of judgment and the beginning of peace.
Panache Desai:
Breathe into your heart and ask, “What would love do now?” Practice this in traffic, in conflict, in silence. When you move from reaction to response, from fear to presence, you’re walking the Christ path.
Neale Donald Walsch:
Talk to God as a friend. Out loud. In your own voice. Ask, “What do you want me to know right now?” Then listen. That act of communion—no rituals, no walls—that is the doorway.
Eckhart Tolle:
Become aware of your breath. Just one full, conscious breath brings you into the now. And in the now, the mind subsides. What remains is pure awareness. That’s the light Jesus pointed to—not outside you, but in you.
Marianne Williamson:
Choose love over fear—again and again. When insulted, pause. When uncertain, bless. When afraid, pray. It’s not about perfection—it’s about alignment. Every small act of love is a step toward the mind of Christ.
Father Richard Rohr (Final Thoughts):
What we’ve heard today is not abstract mysticism—it’s divine practicality.
Christ Consciousness is not a title, but a presence… not a religion, but a remembering.
It is as near as your next loving thought.
And as real as your next breath.
If you are seeking proof of divinity, look in the mirror—with kind eyes.
Final Thoughts by Craig Hamilton
As we bring this journey to a close, I want to leave you not with a conclusion, but with a reminder:
Awakening is not a destination. It is a relationship—to yourself, to life, and to the vast, intelligent mystery that animates the universe.
You don’t have to see visions or hear voices to know you're awakening.
You don’t need to be perfect, peaceful, or wise at every turn.
You simply need to listen deeply, love fully, and return—again and again—to the still point inside you that knows:
“I am part of something larger… and that something lives in me.”
You are already the channel.
You are already the light in the crowd.
You are already shaping your world from the inside out.
You are already carrying the frequency of love that heals and includes.
The Great Awakening isn’t a future event—it is your next breath lived consciously. Your next kind word. Your next honest choice.
So step forward—not as someone trying to become enlightened,
but as someone willing to live from the truth that you already are.
Let your life be the evidence.
Short Bios:
Craig Hamilton
A spiritual teacher and founder of The Practice of Direct Awakening, Craig offers a contemporary path to evolutionary enlightenment grounded in presence and direct experience.
Mike Dooley
Creator of Notes from the Universe, Mike teaches that thoughts become things and encourages people to consciously shape reality through intention and joy.
Adyashanti
A respected non-dual teacher, Adyashanti speaks on awakening beyond the ego with clarity, depth, and deep inner stillness.
Matt Kahn
An empathic spiritual teacher known for blending heart-centered healing with energetic wisdom, encouraging radical self-love.
Caroline Myss
Medical intuitive and bestselling author, Caroline is a pioneer in the fields of energy medicine and spiritual archetypes.
Gabor Maté
Physician and author specializing in trauma, addiction, and mind-body healing, known for integrating Western medicine with spiritual insight.
Lee Harris
An energy intuitive and channeler who blends practical spirituality with compassionate insights, known for his work with the Zs.
Darryl Anka
Channel for Bashar for over 35 years, Darryl brings grounded teachings on multidimensional reality and human potential.
Lyssa Royal Holt
A pioneering channeler and galactic historian, Lyssa shares messages from Pleiadian and other interdimensional sources.
Esther Hicks
Public voice for Abraham, Esther shares teachings focused on the Law of Attraction, vibrational alignment, and joyful living.
Paul Selig
Channel for The Guides and author of several acclaimed books, Paul shares high-frequency transmissions of spiritual truth.
Sara Landon
A channel and teacher of The Council, Sara offers deep guidance on living from soul alignment and awakened consciousness.
Michael Beckwith
Founder of Agape International Spiritual Center, Michael teaches about awakened living through love, purpose, and vision.
Gregg Braden
Author and researcher bridging science and spirituality, Gregg explores ancient wisdom, heart intelligence, and human evolution.
Jean Houston
One of the founders of the human potential movement, Jean blends myth, neuroscience, and social change in her work.
Barbara Marx Hubbard
Visionary of conscious evolution, Barbara dedicated her life to humanity’s spiritual emergence and co-creative potential.
Joe Dispenza
Neuroscientist and author known for his research on neuroplasticity, quantum healing, and transforming reality through consciousness.
Sadhguru
Indian yogi and mystic, Sadhguru teaches inner engineering and self-realization through clarity, simplicity, and grounded wisdom.
Vishen Lakhiani
Founder of Mindvalley, Vishen integrates personal growth, modern spirituality, and systems thinking in his global education platform.
Neville Goddard
Mid-20th century mystic who taught the power of imagination and belief to shape reality through mental assumption.
Byron Katie
Creator of The Work, a method of self-inquiry that dissolves suffering by questioning stressful beliefs.
Rupert Spira
Advocate of non-duality, Rupert teaches the nature of consciousness and the art of being through stillness and self-inquiry.
Florence Scovel Shinn
Early 20th-century metaphysical teacher known for her empowering affirmations and teachings on divine law and manifestation.
Father Richard Rohr
Franciscan friar and author, Father Rohr is known for his contemplative teachings on non-duality, Christian mysticism, and radical grace.
Yeshua (channeled via Tina Louise Spalding)
Channeled voice of Jesus Christ offering teachings of love, forgiveness, and awakening outside religious boundaries.
Marianne Williamson
Spiritual teacher and author of A Return to Love, Marianne applies the teachings of A Course in Miracles to real-world transformation.
Eckhart Tolle
Author of The Power of Now, Eckhart teaches presence, ego transcendence, and awakening through conscious stillness.
Neale Donald Walsch
Author of Conversations with God, Neale shares dialogues that invite people into direct connection with divine wisdom.
Panache Desai
Spiritual teacher and vibrational catalyst, Panache guides people to remember their divine essence through presence and love.
Leave a Reply