In this powerful and wide-ranging conversation, spiritual teacher and practitioner Sean Nedd guides us through a multidimensional exploration of the human soul, bridging traditions from Kabbalah, Ifá, Orisha, and Hinduism, to reveal the deeper truth that lies beneath all systems of belief. With clarity, humility, and spiritual authority, Sean shares his journey through decades of study and lived experience, inviting listeners to move beyond dogma and into direct knowledge of the divine.
Central to the discussion is the remembrance of self—the soul's quest to awaken from spiritual amnesia. Sean explains that each tradition he’s studied, whether Kabbalistic Tree of Life or Yoruba cosmology, ultimately points to the same essential truth: that we are fragments of the Divine, seeking to return to wholeness through conscious alignment, integrity, and inner work.
He speaks to the importance of breath and prayer, not as mere rituals, but as technologies of the soul—portals into presence, energy regulation, and communion with Spirit. He emphasizes that healing and spiritual activation do not come from intellectual accumulation but from embodiment, stillness, and surrender to the wisdom already encoded within us.
Sean also offers profound insights into the misuse of power, the distortions within institutional religion, and the spiritual consequences of collective ignorance. He warns that a society that forgets its sacred origin inevitably spirals into crisis, and he calls for a return to inner authority—what he describes as divine intelligence remembering itself through each of us.
The conversation touches on sacred geometry, soul contracts, ancestral wisdom, and the unseen spiritual laws that govern reality. Sean’s ability to weave together multiple wisdom traditions while stripping away cultural bias creates a space of inclusivity, truth, and healing.
Ultimately, this episode is a call to re-member—to gather the fragmented parts of self and reclaim the divine inheritance we’ve always carried. Sean leaves us with a simple but potent reminder: in breath, in stillness, and in humility, we come home to who and what we truly are.