Reiki – Connection and Love
July 18, 2010 in Healing, Love, Rainbow Bridge Coaching and Healing
I just got back from the hospital after seeing my new grandbaby, Easton, and his two moms. The mom who gave birth to him had to have a C-section after a long night of labor when Easton decided to switch positions and couldn’t be delivered naturally. It gave me great joy to be able to utilize my Reiki training to help ease Mom’s pain, and help her relax into as close to a state of sleep as she could get with 10 other people in the room.
What is Reiki?
Let me explain it as simply as I can. Do you remember when you were a child and your mother kissed your knee when you fell and scraped it? Or, when you were feverish and your parent placed his hands on your forehead and stroked your hair away from your face? When you got older and experienced emotional pain at the break-up of a relationship, and someone you loved held you and rubbed your back? Human touch gives us a feeling of warmth, peacefulness and healing. It also makes us feel cared for and loved.
Reiki is the ancient art of healing. In Japan, energy is called Ch’I or Ki, and means “energy, air, breath, wind, vital breath, vital essence…the activating energy of the universe”. When an individual has been attuned in Reiki, this life force energy flows through them.
People and animals are more than just the physical body that can be seen and touched. We also have three levels of energy called Ki that determine the condition of the physical body. What we are starting to learn in scientific circles is that healing cannot be physical alone, but must also include these vibrational levels of energy. Western medicine treats the physical body, energy healing touches all four bodies.
I believe, along with many Western trained doctors of medicine, that the mind, body and spirit determine a person’s health. Our care team should be holistic in character – made up of persons trained to provide us with loving care in all aspects of our lives. Reiki is one option.
Georgia Feiste, owner of Collaborative Transitions Coaching, Inc., located in Lincoln, NE, is a life transitions coach, writer, and workshop facilitator. She specializes in career, business and personal life transitions for people seeking change in their life. Georgia is also a Reiki Master in Usui Reiki. She is uniquely skilled in providing support and encouragement as her clients set intentional goals to attain their desires, holding open the space they need to stretch and grow. Her passion is success grounded in purpose and passion, standards of integrity and priorities in life. Her website is http://www.collaborativetransitions.com, where she blogs about business and career, and http://www.rainbowbridgecoach.com , where she and many other coaches blog about mind, body, spirit and emotion. Georgia can be reached at (402) 304-1902 or feel free to make an appointment with her for a 30 minute consultation by clicking on Automated Appointments.

When I was learning how to navigate the world and my new life after I lost my son, I read an article that helped me tremendously. So much in fact I decided to base this blog on it! The following is from Richard Marsh’s biography “Surviving Loss”:
Losing a child can be and most often is incapacitating to varying degrees depending on the individual. The definition of
Soon after my son’s murdered remains were found I was filling out a form and came to the question, “How many children do you have?” I remember feeling panic at that moment at how to answer this question I had previously answered easily for over twenty years. Logic said three girls but my heart thought no, that is not right, that seems like denying my sons existence. Next I thought, I have three girls and one son, four kids, no, that isn’t right either, is it?
April 29th, 2007-Today the police called and asked my husband Mike and I to come down again to the station and meet with Joshes dad and step mom for the umpteenth time. Little do I know that the rug will be pulled out from under me severely and quickly without any warning as it was 2 years ago when I was told that my 20 year old son Josh had gone missing.
In the parents grief support group I attended after I lost my son there was often talk of strange occurrences that seemed to happen to not all but many of the parents . By strange occurrences I mean things out of the normal range that are unexplainable and that seem to follow or surround the death of their children. The interesting thing about the discussions is that not one of the parents was spooked by the occurrences nor thought they were evil, witchy, satanic, or otherwise came from or led to anything bad. In fact most parents seemed heartened by them feeling their child was connecting to them in some way as if they were trying to reassure them that they were OK.
When I was told that my son of 20 years who had gone missing almost two years previous, had been found murdered I experienced many emotions. I was extremely bewildered, felt anxious, was depressed and wondered if I had done something or not done something that may have led to it. I had trouble continuing to lead a normal life as I had no time to absorb or prepare for the fact that my world as I knew it had ended and I was catapulted into one I did not understand.
Immediately after I found out my son had been murdered people starting telling me “time heals all wounds”. I am sure they told me this because they wanted to say something to make me feel better or because they had heard the phrase before and it seemed to fit or because they did not know what else to say. I can honestly say that at first when you lose a child it seems like time is the enemy. The impossibly long harrowing days blended into even longer agonizing nights of pain, loneliness and confusion make one wish that time could be stopped and even better reversed to a point when your child was still happy and with you. Then there is the sudden realization that now that your child has died you will never see him on this earth again. That all you really have to hold onto if you are religious or spiritual is that you will eventually be together again but you also soon realize that it will be a long time in coming and in another place. And that thought puts you at odds with time as well!