Coming Home After Transformation

For me, the road back home was not a single return, but a gradual integration—one shaped by years of travel, study, healing work, and lived experience. Looking back, I can…

For me, the road back home was not a single return, but a gradual integration—one shaped by years of travel, study, healing work, and lived experience. Looking back, I can see that the last four decades have been less about leaving life behind and more about learning how to bring what I had learned into ordinary life.

By the time I reached the end of my extended period of travel and training, my life no longer resembled the one I had once known. I had stepped away from traditional nursing roles in hospitals and private homes, and over a ten-year span, I had lived and worked in many different places, moving more than twenty times between 1980 and 1990.

These years were a profound learning curve—one that reshaped not only how I worked, but how I understood people, health, and the many layers that make us who we are.

Near the end of my apprenticeship and studies with my teacher Bernhard, we were invited to participate in a large international gathering in Denmark. This event—a World Healing Congress held on a university campus—brought together hundreds of people from around the world for workshops, demonstrations, and shared exploration over several days.

What struck me most at this gathering was the openness of the Danish people. Practitioners from many traditions offered demonstrations—some familiar, others quite unconventional. People attended not out of blind belief, but curiosity and willingness to observe for themselves.

I witnessed approaches ranging from hands-on therapies to distance-based work, alongside lectures and shared experiences. Some demonstrations were deeply moving, others surprising, and many participants later described meaningful shifts in their wellbeing.

It was during this time that I met my future husband, Claus, a Danish engineer with a genuine interest in the kinds of experiences I had been encountering during my travels and studies.

After completing my training, Claus and I married, and I found myself settling into life in Denmark for the next chapter of my journey.

Living in Denmark offered me a new way to integrate what I had learned into everyday life. I began working in the Copenhagen area through what were known as Health Houses—community-supported spaces funded by local municipalities. These gatherings allowed practitioners to demonstrate their work openly and ethically, offering people the chance to observe, ask questions, and decide for themselves what resonated.

For me, this meant sharing the way I worked with charts and guided information—always with care, privacy, and respect. Each person was unique, and no two sessions were alike. Some sessions focused on physical support, others on emotional or energetic balance. At times the work was subtle; at other times, people reported feeling deeply tired afterward, needing rest before integration could occur.

Over time, these community gatherings became a meaningful way to connect, both with individuals seeking support and with other practitioners committed to helping people find balance in their own way.

A Calling That Continued to Unfold

That early period in Denmark marked the beginning of what has now been nearly forty years of working one-on-one with people. Over time, the information I was guided to share expanded beyond the physical body to include emotional, mental, and what some traditions refer to as karmic or energetic layers.

I have always approached this work with humility and discretion. Sessions are private, and I have never advertised. People have found their way to me through word of mouth, often during moments when they were open to exploring alternatives alongside conventional approaches.

Not everyone is meant to receive this kind of support at every point in their life. There have been times when I was guided not to work with someone, and I have learned to respect that. Sometimes a person is at a crossroads where their own choices—and timing—matter more than any external guidance.

Living the Integration

Returning “home” after transformation does not mean returning to who we were before. It means learning how to live what we’ve learned—quietly, responsibly, and with discernment.

Over the years, I’ve noticed a growing openness in people. As modern life presents new challenges—imbalances in health, environment, and pace—many are becoming more curious about approaches that honor the whole person.

For me, integration has meant continuing to listen, to learn, and to serve where appropriate, without urgency or agenda. It has meant trusting that each person’s path is unique, and that healing, when it comes, must be met with respect for free will and personal readiness.

The road back home is not a return to the past.
It is a steady commitment to live what we know—one quiet step at a time.

 

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