Friday, February 11, 2022

Reiki and Yawning, Belching, Crying, Sighing, Coughing

Yawns do not mean that your companions "are very bad"

When we yawn during a Healing Session, it only means that we are undoing negative energies, it does not mean that the person is very bad. Negative energies can be classified in ascending order from a simple "mal de aire" or "airón", which barely causes a headache, to witchcraft and possessions. Many times we pick up negative energies from other people, places or the environment in general and they don't bring us much trouble.

When we take a shower, sunbathe, bathe at the beach or walk through the forest, many negative energies are released from our body and soul. In any case, some automatic or unconscious yawning, to call it in some way, would never undo a well-done witchcraft, so we discard that assumption that "if you yawn the person treated is very bad". In fact we yawn in our own house, with friends, at the movies, etc., and that does not mean that our friends and family "are very bad".

On the other hand, that "yawning is accompanied by crying" is pine-tree-sized nonsense. A Therapist can, in any case, tear up while yawning, and we have already explained in previous articles that "tearing" is just a secondary effect of yawning. In any case, a Therapist who considers himself such, does not have to cry during the Healing Sessions, but to control the energies, metabolize them, transmute them and convert them into positive energies or undo them.

A Therapist who gets carried away by the patient's energies will then not only cry, but may feel tired, full of pain, dizzy, anxious, nervous, stressed, etc., etc., and what a grace then with the Reiki Practitioner or Master, you will never finish a Therapy or you will finish it very badly.

It could also be that the inexperienced Reiki Practitioner or Master was just releasing their own negative energies during the Healing Session...

... to be continue.

Damian Alvarez
Creator of the Tinerfe Healing System




Get the Book  "Reiki, Belching and Yawning"  (link),
by Damián Alvarez
Visit his  Author Page in the Amazon Publisher  (link)