October 1, 2007
My educational background and career go to Psychology and Special Education. I have always been psychic having found a way to combine both fields to help those who come seeking guidance and healing. There fine line between psychology and psychic grows thinner as all merges.
Most readers of Ellie's World generally enjoy blogs dealing with ways to heal their issues, as it's in the grid to heal now or forever be reconciled when the program closes. For the most part reality is an ongoing series of experiences created for emotional value. It's 3D - 3 dramas or emotional events, going on in your life at any given time, that you must resolve/solve, to move on. Deal of No Deal? People are coasting, seeking answers from all kinds of 'healers' or dropping out.
The heat of summer relationships has ended as new ones emerge with the coming together of people to nest for the winter. People are far more realistic about the nature of relationships, the romance and the pitfalls, than ever before. The internet, books, observations of other's experiences, personal experiences, the quest for freedom, longevity, and more all add to our perspective about the duration of a relationship and how consciousness is shifting.
Issues discussed recently with clients:
Would you prefer me to be here as a therapist or psychic today? What do you want from this session?
Are you comfortable talking about your feelings?
Do you recognize your fears?
Do you stay in a bad situation because leaving is too much work to leave? Does this help your soul grow or does it cause constant confusion and illness?
Ladies ... are you married to the 'nice guy', yet you have grown apart and you don't want to lose him? At the same time are you having an affair with a 'hot guy' who is dysfunctional but you do it to feel passion?
Are you trying to end an affair because it has no future? Do you wonder why you can't let go? Are you angry or relieved when your soul creates closure?
With lost love ... do you feel you will never heal?
With unrequited love, do you wonder what went wrong or dwell on your behavior during the relationship?
Do you suspect your partner of cheating to the point where your accusations are becoming obsessive?
Do you lie to your therapist, or person you confide in, deliberately, or do you not realize what's going on?
Don't you think the answers to these questions, all questions, are self-evident?