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Dear Rob,
The two things most important for good psychic/spiritual work, be it Tarot readings, healings, or spiritual initiations, is (1) to clear out the “stuff” that is in the way, and (2) to relax and allow it to happen through you as a channel. This relaxation is the process of expanding and harmonizing our minds and bodies. Your willingness to clear out the subconscious is right on target. A good hypnotherapist coordinated with a program of meditation can quickly enhance relaxation and assist in the release of old psychological patterns and the freeing of the dense energy they bind to the aura. Many people work the psychic fairs and small gatherings, as a form of weekend and evening “service” while remaining in regular employment – all this while working on their own issues and striving for constant improvement.
When I was running psychic fairs back in the early eighties, we would discuss how we, the readers, would draw exactly the right clients for both their needs and our own development. The people who are intuitively guided to sit at your table, to be awakened and healed by you, will also help you see the issues you need to heal within yourself. I wonder why I drew so many talkative, know-it-all, egotistic, types. It is okay for us to be aware of our limitations, be self conscious, and be cautious about potentially harming others... yet simply get out of the way in the moment when a client sits before us - an provide powerful and incredibly helpful service. Doing readings for the public, in an “entertainment + service” combination, can further your connection with your spiritual guides and offer an opportunity to use advanced techniques when the intuition calls them forth\ into a reading I found that the students who worked diligently on their foundation work (relaxation, self-esteem, self-healing) were the clearer channels. The degree of openness and harmony in the body-mind relationship determines how the spirit can flow through in service to others. Think of a large cup opened to the sky held with a steady hand, vs. a dented cup with holes, held in a weak and shaking hand that is easily jostled by the opinions of others and constantly changing directions according to the forces of the wind and the desires of those who they are trying to serve.
Sincerely,
Craig Junjulas
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