Year: 2019

A deep-seated belief in a past-life experience has created a vicious circle of grief and addiction for this person. Did it really happen, and how can he become free of it?

Following the rhythm of being means being as freely in the joy of the light as you are freely in the stillness of deepest darkness. From that comes light you’ve not known before.

Years of inner work, and a pattern of irritation and anger can still get out of control. Where does it come from, and what can change it?

How are love, self-acceptance and genuine okayness connected? John addresses some misperceptions and adds a little exercise to explore for yourself.

Seeing her children under the societal pressure to perform is distressing for this parent, and she wants to know how she can be of real help.

Step by step, John shines a gentle light on the reason for a pervasive sense of nervousness, within. It all comes from our mistaken identity.

“Nothing that appears to be comes from what appears to be.” This conversation travels deep into the unseen, revealing the shifts required to know the source of the light, within.

This conversation illuminates the way our conditioned relationship to experience solidifies a life of illusion and how we can shift to seeing the truth in any experience.

Unusual experiences that seem to come out of nowhere prompt the woman in this dialogue to seek John’s perspective. What’s happening and how can she live what she has newly awakened to in the busy-ness of her everyday life?

How do you feed a hungry heart? A disturbing sense of not knowing how to give her heart what it needs brings a surprising answer from John, opening the realness and beauty of her deeper and higher self.

Experiencing intimacy in nature comes easily for the man in this dialogue, but not so in being with people, to say nothing of sexual intimacy. John describes the value of remaining in the intimate space that opens for him in nature, despite the sense of vulnerability he may experience in himself.

What can you do when the ‘monster’ of jealousy appears, within? There is one thing and one thing only, John says, that takes it out at the root once and for all.

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