A catalyst speeds up a process. Being a catalyst of transformation means speeding up a process that would happen anyway.
You do not make it happen. You facilitate it, you assist it, you serve it. You serve the one that is in front of you. You love them as they are. You see them as an aspect of God. You see them as God’s perfect creation.
It is a recognition. It is clear seeing, clear knowing.
There are skills that can enhance this, but those skills are secondary, and they only work effectively in the experience of unconditional love and presence.
That means that anyone can do this. This state of being is available to all of you now. See the divinity in yourself, and in everyone and in everything. Your intention to do what’s in your highest good, the highest good of those you serve, and the highest good of all is what enables it.
When you are in this intention, what you need to know to embody it is brought to you at the appropriate time. You know what to say, what to do, and you may not understand where it comes from, but you know it’s true.
Beware of your need for recognition or significance taking over, as it can corrupt this.
The small self is not a healer. The divine is a healer.
The process of healing someone is not something you do, it is something you witness. It is grace.
It is not about you. And you cannot force it. Be intentionally impartial in your work. Love intentionally, facilitate intentionally, support intentionally, but do not be attached to an outcome.
The stages of someone’s development and evolution are up to them. They chose their lessons. Their suffering is for their highest good, and you should not aim to deprive them of an opportunity to learn a lesson out of your own inability to watch them suffer or out of your need for significance.
We see many practitioners who work with people get drained and depleted by their challenges. That comes from the illusion of separation, from the denial of the divine, from the denial that everything is perfect. Attachment to outcomes does not serve the good of the collective.
There is an illusion of a paradox or a contradiction here that we want to address on both an intellectual and energetic level.
One of the challenges we see is that people go into healing professions out of egoic needs. They want meaning and purpose and contribution and recognition for doing a good thing. We are not saying you should not practice healing, but doing it from an egoic place is hacking at the leaves rather than working at the root, and you will not find what you are looking for there.
This ought to be a profession of selfless service. And you can experience meaning and purpose and contribution and recognition from it, but it should not be primary.
The other issue that arises when you do it from an egoic place is that you focus on the wrong thing. When you see yourself as the doer in the healing process, you can be led down a path of prescribing medication and surgeries, etc. And there is nothing wrong with those in isolation, but we do not exist in isolation.
We will say this plainly: Even when a surgery is the best course of action, the surgery will go better when the surgeon and his team are connected to their divine nature and see it in you, too.
The healing energy is unconditional love, not cutting away at someone’s flesh.
And when you have a cut and get sutures, it is not the doctor healing the skin, it is divine love embodied in your form.
So the contradiction that some of you face is that you believe that you have to be attached to the outcome to create the outcome.
And when it happens, you believe it was you, and when it does not happen, you believe it was you, too, and in either case, it enhances or diminishes your false sense of self. And you believe that if you let go of that, you would not try hard and do your best.
And want to give you this intention to try on if you wish.
My intention is to be conscious, to be awake, to be present in every moment.
I see myself and everything that is as God’s perfect creation.
I embody what is for my highest good, and for the highest good of those I serve, and for the highest good of all living beings in my state of being and my actions.
Trust us that when you live this intention, you will do your best and you will enjoy the process.
That is all.