Wendy Rose Williams interv 08.24.2020 - 2020-10-05, 6.24 PM.mp3
Wendy Rose Williams interv 08.24.2020 - 2020-10-05, 6.24 PM.mp3: Audio automatically transcribed by Sonix
Wendy Rose Williams interv 08.24.2020 - 2020-10-05, 6.24 PM.mp3: this mp3 audio file was automatically transcribed by Sonix with the best speech-to-text algorithms. This transcript may contain errors.
Intro music:
Welcome to Grieve with Ease, a podcast where we talk about the many signs of loss and death on each episode, you'll hear from a cross-section of men and women who share how they dealt with loss, found comfort and even humor during what many consider a very dark time. The show is designed to bring comfort, to answer questions and let you know you are not alone. Now, here's your host, Martika Whylly.
Martika Whylly:
Wendy Rose Williams is a past life adventure guide. She helps people release energy that no longer serves them so that they may lead a happier, healthier life filled with purpose. Examples of energy that don't serve us include pain, anxiety and depression. Wendy is a certified spiritual teacher and Reiki master energy healer, as well as a hypnotherapist specializing in past life regression. She's also a published author who voices her own audiobooks. Welcome, Wendy.
Martika Whylly:
Well Wendy, thank you for coming. Thank you for being here. We really appreciate it.
Wendy Williams:
Thank you.
Martika Whylly:
Now, do you want to tell us about your near-death experience? What was your near-death experience like? And how did you and how did it change your life?
Wendy Williams:
The way it changed my life, it was really profound, but it took it took years for it to to fully kick in because it happened in 1997 when I was pregnant with my youngest daughter. And then it really took me about 10 or 12 years to understand it, because it was part of what was to get me on my life path. But I didn't just jump on my life's path at that time because I had two such young children and it just it just wasn't the right time for me. But I envy these near-death experiences. They're just so vivid.
Wendy Williams:
And I think if you talk to any experiencers, it's like you don't forget the detail. If anything, it becomes like more detailed because you understand it more and you just kind of go back and mind that mind that area more.
Wendy Williams:
So the main the main thing it really did for me was it showed me I had wonderful support from the Divine and I hadn't really known that before. I hadn't really had that deep enough belief before.
Martika Whylly:
And what what do you feel happens after death?
Wendy Williams:
What do I feel happens after death? My personal belief is that our souls are eternal and that we can choose to incarnate many times, many places, many types of body forms I believe in free will and free will is not to be confused with getting our way. You know, it doesn't mean that we can make everything happen the way we want it to. It's going to unroll the way it needs to happen. But that's that's my personal belief, is that the soul is eternal and emotions are timeless. And that's why past life energy can be a big deal, because you can just be carrying this baggage around with you, these fears and phobias and self limiting beliefs that just don't make sense anymore. And they're just really holding us back.
Martika Whylly:
And how could somebody tell if it's a past life, grief or pain that's holding them back?
Wendy Williams:
Well, you know what's happened in your present life. And if the grief as an example seems disproportionate to the event and I want to say that in the most empathetic way possible, but just take an example. I'll take my own personal example. And it wasn't over a death. It was over the death of a relationship. And I dated someone that I really cared about for a short time, 13 months. And when it was several years later and I still had not recovered from it, although I had done everything right, I knew something was really going on. It was deeper than just this lifetime.
Martika Whylly:
And what what can you expect? OK, so what can people expect to experience while they're actually grieving?
Wendy Williams:
I think that's really unique to the person. I love your website, Martika. I think it just walks people through it so well. And to understand grief, it's not a straight line. It's like we'd like it to be. We'd like to like, OK, now I've hit this stage now I've hit this stage. Now I've hit this stage. But it doesn't work like that. It's just it's a loop much more than a line. And the first anniversary or a major holiday or something that's really important to you and brings back memories of that person that can trigger the grief all over again at a deeper level, which you're now ready to experience. And it doesn't make it fun or easy, but it does make it very worthwhile and very meaningful to be able to then release it at the deeper level.
Martika Whylly:
Hmm. Yeah, true. I notice that with grieving, it just you think you're over the stage anger, for example, and then something could or someone could say something and then you just that triggers it.
Wendy Williams:
Absolutely. Absolutely. Yes. I went through a lot of grief when I lost my first pregnancy. My first pregnancy was an ectopic. And because we've been trying to get pregnant for years and also I was all loaded up with those hormones from fertility treatment.
Wendy Williams:
So it was just it was just very, very difficult. And I lost the first baby. I had to had to go through surgery. It was too large to be able to do just methotrexate treatment. So I had to go through surgery and agree to have the baby removed. And I'm kind of like looking at the doctor when we're planning this in the exam room before I have the surgery and I'm looking at him and I'm like, why can't you put the baby in the right place? I know that sounds crazy, but why can't it be moved from the fallopian tube? It's a ectopic pregnancy. Why can't it be moved into my uterus? We're going to do surgery anyway. So that was an example of bargaining and that just didn't make a lot of sense. But it was coming from a place of a lot of grief.
Wendy Williams:
And that loss and that diagnosis in that surgery all happened on Thanksgiving Day. So I did not like Thanksgiving very much for about the next ten years. It was quite interesting how what should, you know, typically be a really fun, you know, family big event and this fantastic meal. And I always was feeling the loss of that that baby.
Martika Whylly:
Yeah, yeah. I would bring back memories of.
Wendy Williams:
Right. I had to actually get rid of the clothes I was wearing that day. I associated those clothes with sitting there in the OB's office on the exam room and him just like looking at my face because he knew I didn't want the surgery. I was trying to kind of shut down and go into denial. But it's life threatening. You don't have a choice. You have to have that surgery. And he kind of joked with my husband and said she looks like a runner to me. You take you take one arm and leg it. I'm going to take the other leg because we need to get her on the gurney because we need to go to surgery now. And I remember looking down at my clothes and it kind of like imprinted for me what I was wearing. And it's like, oh, this outfit's going bye bye.
Martika Whylly:
Mhm. Yeah. What's good for you. You recognize that because not, not everybody does they lose somebody and they keep all their clothes the room just the way it was and.
Martika Whylly:
You know, they just have a hard time letting go.
Wendy Williams:
You have to do and it's healthy for you.
Martika Whylly:
Yeah.
Wendy Williams:
I mean, it's also most likely we're all different. There's no prescriptions for this. But also getting in there, I've seen a few people just after a loved one passes on, do the opposite and just get in to that room or that apartment or house and just go like a fury and be trying to clean out everything immediately. And I don't think that's necessarily that healthy either.
Martika Whylly:
There's got to be happy medium between these things and getting rid of everything. Yeah, I've had that experience with my my cousin's mom.
Wendy Williams:
OK.
Martika Whylly:
A half cousin and she died 15 years old. Commit suicide.
Wendy Williams:
Oh my goodness.
Martika Whylly:
Came in her room and cleaned out all her stuff.
Martika Whylly:
And of course that this was after people and her friends were allowed to go in there and take whatever they wanted that reminded them of Nikki and their friendship. So that was kind of nice before she went in there.
Martika Whylly:
I kind of I mean, got rid of stuff and cleaned it up. And and it wasn't maybe a few months after that, it that happened that I noticed I had a pair of shoes that went missing my top, a CD. Now, these are all the things that Nikki, the one had passed on had.
Martika Whylly:
She would go in my room and borrow clothes and take stuff and hear all these people going in her room, taking all her stuff, which half of it was mine, probably that was the funny part because I'm like.
Martika Whylly:
Well, crap, that was a good CD. I'm never going to get that back. But, you know, it's not a big deal. It was just.
Wendy Williams:
I would say that you felt it, you felt it in your heart.
Martika Whylly:
Yeah, and I was kind of in denial, like, you know, should have went in there to grab stuff. But I didn't want anything. Had I gone in there, I would have said, hey, wait a mine, that's mine. That's mine. Can't have this.
Martika Whylly:
It's mine, know, because I saw her mom come over to help clean up and well, her room and whatnot. And I said, where did you get that top? She goes from Nikki's room. I said, that's my top.
Wendy Williams:
Oh, my goodness.
Martika Whylly:
So I just thought, how many how many clothes she, you know, borrow from me that I didn't even notice. That's how much clothes I had, you know.
Martika Whylly:
Yes. So.
Martika Whylly:
Can you also share some examples of what you've learned about handling grief from your own experiences or your clients?
Wendy Williams:
Absolutely. Well, I'm a past life adventure guide. And what I mean by that is I help people release energy that no longer serves them. Examples include depression, anxiety and pain are the big three. And what will happen is my clients are able to write up to 20 questions that they have for their own higher self and soul, because past life regression sessions, they're not a psychic reading. It's not me telling them I see this in your guides or saying that, you know, you should know this information. The point of it is to have the person relax to you feel just like you do when you're going to fall asleep at night or when you first waking up in the mornings, you're kind of halfway house asleep, that lovely drowsy feeling. So that's where you want to be. And that's a fantastic place to be for healing because you can access your subconscious. So they write the questions, things they just haven't been able to figure out or have struggled with. It might be things to do with relationships. It might be to do with career or finances or can certainly be things to do with health issues or also things that are just like holding them back, like they're afraid to do something or their fears or phobias in certain areas. So they've written those questions. And then I'm just gently asking them those questions during the session. And they may have asked typically people will ask a question or two about, you know, missing a certain person or grieving the end of a relationship, whether that person's passed on or not.
Wendy Williams:
They may simply not be in their life anymore because they had a big falling out. And there's a grief process after that, too, just like there is a grief process after someone drops their body or there may be grief around the loss of a job that they absolutely adored or that a marriage or romance that they weren't ready to have end or being estranged from someone. So what I often find is the questions that are on their their soul, their herself, their guides answer it in surprising ways, just lovely, amazing ways. And it might come through in the past life that they're shown and they're shown a pattern of feeling like they ended up abandoned alone, whatever it might be. So it's really exacerbated when their parent passes on. And yes, we can really grieve. And there's nothing wrong with that to really grieve a parent passing on. But it is a natural part of life to have a parent passing on, a grandparent passing on, etc. So if the person is just, you know, really being triggered, we often find that there's this deeper pattern that they hadn't known about. And we can heal it by visiting, by going back to what's called the lifetime of origin. When they first started to really feel that grief, that loneliness, the anger, that rage, you know, whatever the emotion might be, it's wonderful to get back to that source. When did it first happened and why?
Martika Whylly:
Mm hmm. That's interesting. Yeah, it's very interesting.
Wendy Williams:
And it can be very surprising and another surprising thing is people don't even have to believe in past lives or reincarnation. They just have to be open minded enough that they want to try, you know, a new type of healing session and just see what comes up. Sometimes they come to me because they have a lot of trouble sleeping. And that's probably the number one compliment I get from people, is I'm able to relax better since we had the session and I sleep better. You know, I fall asleep more quickly, I stay asleep better. I can get back to sleep. And I actually feel rested when I get up in the morning rather than beat up. And oh my gosh, why is the alarm blaring at five a.m. again? So you know that that can be a wonderful side effect. And also getting people to feel more supported, getting them connected with their guide. I'm getting them connected with their higher self. So being able to tap into some of that intuition, some of that wisdom, because you don't have to go full woo woo with this, you know, it might be more to you. It feels like intuition feels like your internal guidance system.
Martika Whylly:
Yeah. And do you find when you connect people with that, that higher self, they feel less alone?
Wendy Williams:
Yes, absolutely. And are able to relax more and not. We certainly are pivotal.
Martika Whylly:
It is. It is. And I could just imagine I, I do go on the coronavirus world map count down or count counter.
Martika Whylly:
Ok, and yeah that's I mean I don't want to scare you because you're in the States.
Martika Whylly:
Right. But right now I mean in five minutes there was I don't know, 24 deaths like this gives an account of how many
Wendy Williams:
Exactly.
Martika Whylly:
And I try not to watch that too much, but. I don't know, it just.
Martika Whylly:
I just find it very interesting, the amount of people, I guess I mean, going from. From the virus, but I guess we don't have a counter for cancer, I think I think cancer still number one for cancer and heart disease.
Wendy Williams:
Yeah, and back and forth. Forth and then and diabetes is certainly high, too high.
Martika Whylly:
And then I think now I'm not sure how accurate this is, but I heard that the coronavirus deaths is number three now.
Martika Whylly:
But then again, I'm not sure.
Wendy Williams:
It's hard to know what the statistics are because we're still in the thick of it.
Martika Whylly:
Yeah.
Wendy Williams:
So it's it's just hard to know how they're how the reporting is being done.
Martika Whylly:
Mm hmm. Well, I think I think when they recorded that, I think goes it goes somewhere to the queen maybe and. From there, it gets distributed to places where they're actually doing the stats for world stats or their country.
Wendy Williams:
You're referring to in Canada, where it would be rolled up into the UK, in other words.
Martika Whylly:
Well, I'm just saying that when somebody dies, there's a death certificate and it's it's counted. I'm sure some somebody somewhere, you know, they have all the information to do to be able to do that.
Wendy Williams:
The Department of Health or whatever the regulatory body is, and then rolling up to the from the local level to the state to the national and then international.
Martika Whylly:
Yeah. I don't know who runs the it's called the coronavirus world map. OK, counter. time or something to that effect anyhow.
Martika Whylly:
But one thing that I would like to teach people is that death really shouldn't be something we mourn, it should be something we celebrate.
Martika Whylly:
We have a culture that is really backwards and I'm thinking we really should be celebrating right now instead of, you know, of course, you know, when you lose somebody you love, you're going to grieve. But when you realize that they've gone on to a better place, they're no longer in the physical realm having to deal with climate change and bills and relationships and family and all the physical aspects of being here.
Martika Whylly:
You know, if they had just a glimpse of what it's like in the light. They they would they would be more relieved, sleep better at night. What are your thoughts?
Wendy Williams:
Yes, well, yes. Well, my thoughts are I think one of the main decisions we have to make is does the universe have my back? Do I feel that it's a benevolent place? And do I feel loved and supported? That doesn't mean things aren't going to be incredibly challenging at times. But as an overall perspective, do you believe that or do you feel, you know, this is just merciless and everyone and everything is out to get me? And no matter what I do, it's not going to get any better. You know, it's like which type of philosophy do you have going on in in your life? And yes, I mean, both Americans and Canadians have a long way to go when you look at other cultures and how other cultures just naturally sit with people as they're passing on and they don't need to put them in a hospital typically. I mean, sure, they might be having, you know, visiting nurse or doctor or someone come in to help keep them comfortable or, you know, depending what's going on. But they're just like naturally, like death midwives or death Doolan's because it's part of the culture and it's just an out of respect. And there's not the fear around it because it's not institutionalized and taken away. So you just see it, you know, just like the cultures where birth is still in the home, where most births are still in the home and death taking place there, too.
Wendy Williams:
And it's not been that many years where we were having people die at home. I mean, they used to be laid out in the parlor. That's what the parlor was for. You know, and to have people coming in and visiting and I mean, that's what a week was, was this grand celebration. We now we are trying to come back around to that again with a celebration of life versus a funeral being this horribly terrible, depressing experience with everyone dressed in black just sobbing their heart out. And I'm not saying you have to do what's right for you. I mean, I've absolutely sobbed at, you know, some some funerals because that's what was right for me. But it's just it's very, very interesting. And I can see why if people believe there's only one lifetime, this is all I have. This is all I got. And I'm worried about where that person's going to go and are they OK? I can see why there'd be a lot more concern about it with with religions having inserted themselves into with this whole heaven or hell concept and just just the the controlling of the masses, so to speak.
Martika Whylly:
Well, yeah, I believe I believe certain topics aren't taught in school because because they can have more control over people like, you know, saying when on your life. But we choose, we chose I believe we chose to come here and we choose when we leave. It's always it's always your own choice.
Wendy Williams:
Which is back to life free will point. I completely agree with you.
Martika Whylly:
It's always a choice. And so so I've been myself in situations where I could have felt like I could have been attacked. Somebody could have did harm to me. And I'd look at them like, you're kidding me.
Martika Whylly:
You have no idea who you're messing with. It's not my time yet is what I'm saying.
Wendy Williams:
You knew it was not your time and you're fully in your power.
Martika Whylly:
And I showed no fear. And when you show somebody who's about to attack, no fear, it's like all of a sudden you've just given them, like, they feel the fear.
Wendy Williams:
Correct.
Martika Whylly:
You know, I mean, I don't know how I've I've only experienced the one time, but actually twice. But when you show no fear, they show the fear. They're like, oh, she has no fear. And then they become fearful because you're not fearful.
Wendy Williams:
Correct. Well, I think they're projecting fear at you. And you deflected it back now and they're confused. Why is this not working? Why is she not afraid?
Martika Whylly:
Yeah,
Wendy Williams:
You know, I'm twice her size or I've come at her in the in, you know, in the dark on the street.
Wendy Williams:
And she shouldn't have been expecting me. But yet somehow, you know, you just you've deflected it back.
Martika Whylly:
Now, of course, I was younger and it wasn't and I still don't fear death. But at that time, I definitely didn't fear it.
Martika Whylly:
So. That's probably why that happened.
Wendy Williams:
Right. that's a great story. That's very powerful.
Martika Whylly:
Well, there's I have a couple a couple of them like that, a probably should write them out. So I don't forget.
Martika Whylly:
Yeah, so so, Wendy, how can past life regression help with grief and depression?
Wendy Williams:
Yes, the way it can help is, as I mentioned, we're able to get to the root cause of it. We often go to a lifetime or lifetimes of origin. And when the person realizes, oh, my goodness, this happened 500 years ago, this happened two thousand years ago. And you can just say to them, that was then and this is now. And they just they're able to heal it and release it most often right in that moment and and just let go of it. For instance, in my first book, The Regression Healing One, the client had a lot of physical pain. He had been a professional athlete. He played in a high contact sport. He had broken his neck and he had a lot of physical pain. And he didn't want to be taking drugs for it. And he had tried Western medicine. He tried alternative. He was getting like a little bit of relief through massage and acupuncture. But he wanted more so that he could really live his life and be able to, you know, feel comfortable in his body and not have all this pain. And when we did this session, he went back to two lifetimes where he found he had been harmed. And it was really unusually gnarly and graphic. And I want people to rest assured you're not going to be shown anything that's not right for you. This is it's your own higher self and guides who absolutely love you and just hold you in such a sacred space and are just so wise. But what he needed to see was in two pretty rough life times where he had been purposefully harmed and he realized he'd not forgiven the people. So here it is hundreds of years later.
Wendy Williams:
And one of the people and I always ask people when there's viewing that past life, I always ask them, you just look around you carefully. Maybe they'll be sitting at a dinner table and be relaxed, just look around and the person doesn't have to look the same, but you'll recognize their energy. Or maybe you just see something in their eyes because the eyes really are the window to the soul. Do you see anybody you recognize them in that light that's in your life now? And so he was able to draw the connection. And when I asked him gently, is it important? Do you need to know who harmed you? And he said, oh, my gosh, one of them was my mother. She's my mother, now. That explains so much because they had a very close yet very complex relationship. And I think it's because he was without realizing it, he was bopping back into this, oh, my gosh, I can't trust my mother. You know, she might harm me. And he would then overgeneralizing it, too, at times to I can't trust women. So you can imagine how that was going in his life. Not well. So when he when he said, oh, my gosh, now I see what it is, I just need to forgive the perpetrators. It's just that simple. And his pain went from an eight on the zero to 10 pain scale to a three. And that was amazing. And he's been able to hold it for years, ever since. He's never needed another session that that I'm aware of because we were in touch for years after that. And it just was so powerful when he just said, I forgive you.
Wendy Williams:
There's a bigger picture here.
Martika Whylly:
Yeah, I do believe in that. I do believe every physical pain is related to emotional pain.
Wendy Williams:
Yes.
Martika Whylly:
Yes, I do believe that. And I know a lot of people don't see that. Like my coworkers, like, for example, some people say their you know, their eyes are bothering them and they can't see right now. I would be saying, well, what what is it that you don't want to see?
Wendy Williams:
That you are right on. Go ahead.
Martika Whylly:
And and they just look at me like you. Now you're trying to get into my head or something. It's just for me, maybe because I've read enough about it and I've experienced enough about it, you know, from my own pain.
Martika Whylly:
Like, why am I? Even when I was younger, I was very, very inquisitive as a child. I'd be like asking, why am I having this tension headache, like when I was younger, I didn't get a lot of headaches, but when I feel pain, I would ask. Life or the universe, why am I having this pain and would be because I'm really thinking about something too much worry.
Wendy Williams:
Over thinking.
Martika Whylly:
Over thinking and worrying about, I didn't get my homework done. Now, I'm on my way to school and I be experiencing this headache. Thinking where is this headache coming from. Why is that? And then the answer would be like, well, because you're not prepared for class and you're worried that you're going to get in trouble and sent to the principal's office and then your mom is going to know that she's going to ground you and then you can't go any birthday parties.
Martika Whylly:
So this would, you know.
Wendy Williams:
How big did you just make that?
Martika Whylly:
Yeah, pretty big.
Wendy Williams:
That's what we do. We get we get on the crazy train at times if we don't know how to relax and just remove and clear our energy and clear those emotions. Because what you're saying is so true. One of my favorite books and I always have it on my bookshelf to be able to reach during client sessions. Is Louise Hays heal your body? Are you familiar with that book? I'm familiar with Louise Hays, but I've not read any of her books. That's exactly what she goes into. And it's a book where you just look up whatever the pain point is or whatever the disease is. So if someone has a stiff neck, a sore neck, neck pain, it's just as simple as either asking them or you can ask yourself what or who am I letting be a pain in the neck? Or I had a friend who came down with frozen shoulder very suddenly and it was on the right side. And I think of the right side of the body is being the giving side and the left side is the receiving side. And I asked her, are you shouldering too much responsibility? Is that possible? And she just looked at me and she said, Oh, my gosh, you can't believe the release I just started feeling in my shoulder when you asked me that question. So, yes, she needed to go for physical therapy. But, you know, kind of knowing the emotional root of it, if she was overdoing, you know, working full time, being a great wife, taking care of two kids, doing all this volunteering, taking care of the home, it was kind of an obvious question.
Martika Whylly:
Yeah. Yeah.
Wendy Williams:
She was shouldering too much responsibility.
Martika Whylly:
And that's and that's funny because every part of the body that you experience pain in is a certain type of what you're talking about, like emotional. Like, for example, I was having lower back pain in my aunt once said, I believe that that is you're not getting enough emotional support. She read that in a book somewhere.
Martika Whylly:
And it might have been Louise, but and I thought at that time of my life, no, I wasn't feeling I was getting a lot of emotional support. And and that was years and years ago. And it happened again recently maybe, what, a year or two ago, where editors and publishers wanted to change the font of my book because it was in cursive and not a lot of people read cursive. And because of this resistance, if you will, because I was I had my heels in the ground, I was not changing the font, even though I agreed with what they were saying, I start experiencing back pain, a lot of back pain to the point where it was painful, sitting up or standing up and and moving in certain certain movements.
Wendy Williams:
Right. Position. Right.
Martika Whylly:
So I turn I turn to Elizabeth. The story of Queen Elizabeth from the fifteen hundreds.
Wendy Williams:
What's that story about?
Martika Whylly:
The Virgin Queen. She was, she ruled for over 40 years. OK, but if you ever get a chance to see the movie Elizabeth and Elizabeth II the Golden Age, OK, very powerful woman. I mean, that's not a lot of movies that you can turn to where you see powerful women that you want to emulate. So I watch that and you know that the next day my back felt better and I thought, I'm going to go watch that again. And it started to I started to become confident in my decision. And I let other people kind of bully me and saying, well, we know what we're doing. We're editors or publishers. We know what make books sell. And like, I don't care about that this is staying. And because.
Wendy Williams:
Because your guidance was that strong.
Martika Whylly:
Yeah.
Martika Whylly:
Yeah. But it did affect me physically and but it's good to be aware of these things. Again I wish they would teach this in schools, maybe they do in colleges and universities, but they need to teach it in the lower levels so that when children grow up, when they have aches and pains, they know it's an emotional thing.
Wendy Williams:
Right.
Martika Whylly:
They might not be looking at. Right.
Wendy Williams:
Right. Absolutely. And yes, they've had the studies of the schools where they teach meditation and the kids just do so much better or they'll do like a few simple yoga stretches, because if the kids are just, you know, jumping out of their skin and need more recess time and it's not scheduled at that time, you know, the teachers that just just do that with them, there's different ways to get them to come back because it's hard for kids to sit for that many hours in chairs and to be listening and focusing.
Martika Whylly:
Yeah, it's not it's not right.
Wendy Williams:
No, no, it's not a normal.
Martika Whylly:
No, it's not normal.
Martika Whylly:
I used to I think it's Finland is the I think the stats as far as children graduating and having successful careers, is up there because their teachers just want the kids to be happy. There's no competitions, there's no homework. School is four hours a day, Monday to Friday. The rest of the time is for going out and playing, discovering, having adventures. But I thought, yeah, but I wished that, you know, growing up because I hated school like most kids. And, you know, I play sick a lot of times. And my mom was on to me on most of the times, but she let me stay home. But yeah, it's sitting and sitting in a room with. You know, four walls and chairs and told to be quiet and sit straight for all that time is asking a lot from young people.
Wendy Williams:
I mean, that's not the natural way they learn. I mean, I do have more diversity in some of the schools with, you know, the nature tracks and and that that sort of thing and the discovery schools and.
Martika Whylly:
Well, we're evolving slowly, but that's that's good to know.
Martika Whylly:
Well, I don't think I have any more questions for you there, Wendy.
Wendy Williams:
Well, thank you so much for having me as your guest. I really appreciate the.
Martika Whylly:
You know what I'd like I'd like to work with you a little bit with you. Where are you? You're in the States.
Wendy Williams:
Yes, I'm located in the Seattle area, but I work with all clients via zoom and I've been doing that for about four years now, so not related to covid, but it certainly was great because I was already, you know, fully versed in being able to do what's called a distance session for the past life regression and record them for everybody. Because when you hear your own voice, when you hear your energy change on that recording and you hear your your wisdom coming through that soul wisdom, that's a big deal for people. And they get excited that they can access that and that that's available to them. And, you know, they just want to be able to do more of that. So many will then be inspired that they will meditate more or will take up meditation or some other spiritual practice.
Martika Whylly:
Mm hmm. So where can people reach you if they wanted a past life regression to help forgive loved ones, even if they a past and they haven't they you know, am I having a fight with somebody?
Martika Whylly:
And then they passed away and you can forgive yourself.
Wendy Williams:
That's one of the toughest situations after dying.
Wendy Williams:
Yes. That open that just open loop of pain like that. What my Web site is my full name, Wendy, with Y Rose Williams dot com. And people are welcome to go there and they'll find lots of radio interviews and podcasts there on the media tab on a variety of topics to help get more information about spirit guides and soul mates and just a variety of topics. And they're also welcome from my website. They can request a complimentary 15 minute phone appointment if they'd like to learn more about having a past life regression. I offer either two and a half hour or four hour sessions or if they would like to have ascended Master Mary Magdalene channeled for them. That's the other service I offer and my books are on there, too.
Martika Whylly:
Nice. Well, thank you so much. Wendy Rose Williams.
Wendy Williams:
Thank you.
outro music:
You've been listening to the Greive with Ease podcast with your host, Martika Whylly, we hope you found comfort with what you heard. Be sure to leave a rating and review of the Greive with Ease podcast show and visit our website at https://grievewithease.com.
Sonix is the world’s most advanced automated transcription, translation, and subtitling platform. Fast, accurate, and affordable.
Automatically convert your mp3 files to text (txt file), Microsoft Word (docx file), and SubRip Subtitle (srt file) in minutes.
Sonix has many features that you'd love including advanced search, automatic transcription software, automated subtitles, automated translation, and easily transcribe your Zoom meetings. Try Sonix for free today.