I recommended it, and little by little, the regulars who had always come to me began to change their session menus to Inner Child and receive healing.
While there are people who come to me once a month, hoping for the future, wishing for change, and believing that things will get better, I believe that by doing this healing, both myself and the clients who are receiving it, will be able to make a difference.
What does this healing mean?
Where does the mind really want to go? (What do I want to do?)
What does the subconscious mean, and by extension, what does the soul mean?
I had only a vague idea of such things.
Spirituality says
Heal your inner child and things will change.”
I think that is true.
However, as the healing process continued, a new question arose, “Is it enough to heal only the inner child? A new question arose: “Is it enough to heal the inner child alone?
As I wrote last time, no matter how much I heal my inner child, one wound after another keeps coming up.
What I realized after a number of times is that there is no end to how many wounds (traumas and negative emotions) you can heal in front of you.
I realized that there was no point unless I did something about the bigger wound that was deeper than the one in front of me.
The scars that were originally inflicted in childhood have grown over the years and become deeper than we think.
So no matter how much we heal the wounds in front of us, the deep wounds in the back will always remain painful and aching.
I realized that the deep wounds were like festering wounds, and when they were brought to the surface (under the conscious mind), they became strange behaviors and words, and became a problem in relationships.
And there were many different types of deep wounds, and I decided to heal them one by one, according to my clients.