A lost voice became a doorway. When our guest—a former international singer—underwent thyroid surgery and fell into silence, a drumbeat led to a startling vision of a warrior and an arrow to the throat. That image cracked open a deeper inheritance: the teachings of a shamanic grandfather, a flood of memory that reshaped a life built on stages into a life built on service. We walk with her from backstage glamour to soul work, where the goal is not to fix the self but to listen to the parts that have been shouting from the dark.
We lean into Ning meditation, a practice named for the cocoon we weave from hurt. Here, shadow is not a label but a living being with name, age, and story. Plates are set for these parts, gifts are offered, and rituals return dignity to what once sabotaged. Through drumming, secret chants, and elemental sessions—especially the fire that reveals ancestral repetition—students learn to travel into the shadow’s point of view and witness the exact moments where loyalty to the past overrides freedom in the present. This is soul hacking and soul archaeology: transforming the narrative by partnering with the soul and the shadow, not overpowering them.
The conversation widens to the collective: a world shaped by unworked shadows and the humility of tending what we can—our small circles, our food, our breath, our gratitude. Legacy becomes a practice, not a pedestal. We explore what it means to be “immortal” through actions that inspire long after we’re gone, and how service, paradoxically, returns us to joy. If you’re curious about shadow work, transgenerational healing, and rituals that make change feel real in the body, this one will meet you where words usually fail.
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This Podcast is sponsored by Onlinevents