Guided Awakenings

Guided Awakenings This page offers metaphysical services of all kinds. If you do not find what you need we will. Licensed past life regressionist and hypnotist.

A spiritual advisor, mentor, teacher, healer, and metaphysical worker who has been on the spiritual journey for 3 decades in this world and many others. It pleases us that you stop on our page or were brought here somehow, even if you are not aware of why, trust me when I say this we do. Take the journey and contact us and let us get you too the next level.

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05/27/2025

Come meet me

04/19/2025
04/16/2025

“Take a chance and see what happens — you are only limiting yourself.”

This statement is a call to break free from the walls of fear, doubt, and hesitation that we often build around ourselves. Every time you hold back from trying something new, speaking your truth, or stepping toward a dream, you’re not protecting yourself — you’re preventing growth.

Taking a chance doesn’t mean being reckless. It means trusting that even if you fail, you’ll learn something valuable. It means believing that you are worthy of more — more joy, more opportunity, more alignment. The unknown might seem scary, but it’s also where all potential lives.

Limiting yourself often comes from outdated stories: “I’m not good enough,” “What if I fail?” “What will people think?” These are illusions dressed as safety nets. But real safety — the kind that nourishes your soul — comes from honoring your inner voice and choosing courage.

When you take a chance:
• You open doors that didn’t exist before.
• You begin to trust in your ability to handle whatever unfolds.
• You align more deeply with your purpose.

So ask yourself — what’s really holding you back? And what might your life look like if you just… went for it?

The magic happens on the other side of the leap.

04/06/2025

As a traveling hypnotist on my journey I have met many skeptics who think they cannot be hypnotized. Last night in a college town it was no different after the show we went to the bars and defied reality as we hypnotized the skeptics. People would come up to me and say your fake or it does not work on me and in 3 minutes they are singing twinkle twinkle to everyone in the bar. I would like to impress upon everyone about skepticism and tricks to handle it. You all know me i use both analytical and creative avenues ringer the results.

1. Meet Them Where They Are

Instead of trying to “convert” skeptics, acknowledge their viewpoint. Something like:

“It’s totally valid to question things that seem outside the norm. I invite curiosity, not blind belief.”

2. Shift from Proving to Inviting

Instead of proving the work, you can frame it like:

“You don’t have to believe in anything for this to work. Just come with an open mind and experience it for yourself.”

3. Science + Spirit Balance

Use neuroscience, psychology, or quantum physics as bridges:

“Hypnosis has measurable effects on brainwave states. Whether you view it as spiritual or psychological, the results are real.”

4. Let the Results Speak

Focus on transformation:

“Many clients come in skeptical, and that’s okay. What matters is how they feel after the session.”

5. Use Testimonials Wisely

Share stories of other skeptics who had surprising breakthroughs. This builds trust without pressure.

04/02/2025

Simplicity is the best; humans complicate things.

At the core of life, everything operates through simple truths: the sun rises, we breathe, the heart beats, nature flows in cycles. These are effortless, powerful systems that don’t require overthinking to work. The more we align with this natural simplicity, the more peace, clarity, and flow we tend to experience.

But humans—blessed with consciousness, memory, and imagination—often overlay these simple truths with stories, expectations, labels, and structures. We crave meaning, control, and certainty, so we build complex systems to feel safe. We create rules, hierarchies, identities, and technologies that often disconnect us from what is essential.

In relationships, instead of honest presence, we analyze and judge. In healing, instead of trusting the body and the breath, we pile on diagnoses and doubt. In spirituality, instead of simply being, we chase elaborate rituals and external validation.

Complexity isn’t inherently wrong—but when it distracts us from the truth of the moment, or adds confusion where there could be clarity, it becomes a weight. True wisdom often lies in the return to simplicity: a deep breath, a sincere conversation, a quiet mind, an act of kindness.

Simplicity isn’t the absence of depth—it’s the essence of clarity.

04/02/2025

My mentor Les Brown Always gave one of his speeches and he neveree explained it in depth to those. Here is my interpretation of it.

FEAR: False Evidence Appearing Real — A Deeper Look

Fear often masquerades as a protector, keeping us alert and cautious. But in many cases, especially in the spiritual or personal growth journey, fear becomes a prison. The acronym “False Evidence Appearing Real” reminds us that fear is usually rooted not in truth, but in illusion.

1. False

Fear begins with a distortion. It pulls from past traumas, societal conditioning, and internalized limitations. The mind generates scenarios that haven’t happened, aren’t happening, and often won’t happen — but they feel real.
• Example: “I’m not good enough.” But what’s the evidence? Often, it’s based on outdated narratives or isolated moments, not current truth.
• Spiritual layer: False beliefs often stem from the ego, which seeks safety through control and separation, not through truth.

2. Evidence

The mind looks for “proof” to support the fear. Confirmation bias kicks in — we start noticing only what reinforces the fear, and we ignore what contradicts it.
• We collect “evidence” from past experiences, what others have said, or even assumptions about the future.
• This “evidence” is usually selective, incomplete, or outdated.

3. Appearing

Fear wears a mask. It appears real, often showing up as anxiety, dread, procrastination, or avoidance. But appearance isn’t truth — it’s just perception filtered through fear.
• This is where illusion and reality blur.
• The emotional intensity makes it feel true, even when it’s not.

4. Real

When we believe the illusion long enough, it becomes real in our experience. We limit our actions, suppress our voice, or stay in situations that don’t serve us — all because we’ve mistaken a shadow for something solid.
• Real doesn’t mean true. It means we’ve made it part of our reality by believing in it and acting accordingly.

Transcending Fear

To dissolve fear, we must bring it into the light:
1. Witness it without judgment — Notice the fear, name it, and see what it’s trying to protect.
2. Question the evidence — Ask: Is this true? Can I absolutely know it’s true?
3. Return to the present moment — Most fear lives in the future. Presence dissolves projection.
4. Shift into higher awareness — From a soul perspective, all experiences are for growth. Even fear.

03/31/2025

My motivation topic I will be hoping to take on tour.

“Find your motivation and go for it” sounds simple, but it holds a lot of power when you unpack it. It’s about connecting to your “why” and then aligning your actions with that inner drive. Here’s what each part really means:

1. “Find your motivation”

This is the internal compass. It’s what gets you out of bed when you’re tired, what keeps you going when you want to quit. But motivation isn’t just about energy—it’s about clarity.

To find your motivation, ask yourself:
• What do I truly want?
• Why does this matter to me?
• How will my life change if I follow through?
• What pain am I moving away from, and what vision am I moving toward?

True motivation comes from purpose, not pressure. It’s often rooted in something deeply personal—freedom, impact, healing, proving something to yourself, or creating a better life for your family.

And here’s the thing: motivation doesn’t always feel like fireworks. Sometimes it’s quiet. Sometimes it’s the steady voice that says, “I don’t want to be in this same place a year from now.”

2. “And go for it”

Once you’ve got your why, you have to act on it—even if you’re scared, even if you don’t have all the answers, even if the timing isn’t perfect.

“Go for it” means:
• Taking the first step, even if it’s small
• Committing fully, not just dabbling
• Being willing to fail forward and adjust
• Showing up daily, even on the hard days

It’s not about waiting for confidence. It’s about building it through action. Courage comes before clarity sometimes.

The whole picture:

“Find your motivation and go for it” is about living intentionally. It’s refusing to coast through life on autopilot. It’s recognizing that time will pass no matter what, so you might as well use it to build something meaningful.

When you connect to a purpose that lights you up and take consistent action—even if imperfect you create momentum. That momentum is what turns dreams into reality.

Address

231 Broadway Avenue Suite 4
Yankton, SD
57078

Telephone

+16056566614

Website

http://www.anewagetherapy.com/

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