


September fifteenth, 2024
Just got off a session with Susan She’s part of the mentorship program, but honestly she heals a lot on her own too.
We got into this really interesting conversation about how large corporations pad their offers. Like, they’ll present you with a salary, but then tack on a “bonus” structure that looks good on the outside but isn’t really a good deal.
People end up with what I’d call “acceptance remorse”—they buy into it thinking they can make it work, even though deep down they know it’s not really a great offer.
It’s like when a college professor asks you to write a 300-word essay. Instead of filling it with real content, you might pad it with spacing, punctuation, bigger vocabulary, or filler words. On the surface, it looks like it meets the requirements, but it’s not the substance it’s supposed to be.
Susan brought up this term from graphic design that I wasn’t familiar with: kerning. Basically, she used it to describe how you can strip something down to its skeleton and really see the logistics and the reality of it—before you accept it. And I was like, holy fuck, that’s brilliant.
As she was applying this idea, I suddenly saw her inside the Titanic timeline. The ship wasn’t really the Titanic—it was an older ship, painted and repurposed, part of this whole scheme with a bank.
That wasn’t a conspiracy theory, it was an actual conspiracy. I had her apply her Kerning Healing to that event full-on, and holy shit—it was intense.
The healing was so timeline-shifting that it physically hurt. I felt it move through me, shaking me from head to toe. It was so painful she actually had to apply an energetic epidural to the rebirthing process, just so we could get through it. I hated it—but also, it was really, really cool.
We tried applying it to a few other points in history, and it worked the same way. But here’s the thing, she can apply it in your everyday life too.
It’s powerful. Okay bye.
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