Online class with Shivani Lucki from Ananda Assisi
This online workshop with Shivani, author of the Healing with Life Force trilogy, highlights some of the revolutionary healing techniques developed by Paramhansa Yogananda. He tells us:
“The power of healing is the property of every individual soul.”
Learn how to develop and use this power for yourself and others.
Explore:
Why we get sick
The karmic nature of illness
How to instantly access healing life force
Exercises to enliven and regenerate your body cells and organs
Ways to eliminate toxins from the body and negativity from the mind
Methods for avoiding fatigue and discouragement
How to serve as a channel for healing life force
Recommended reading: Healing with Life Force: Prana available in paperback and ebook from Crystal Clarity Publishers (An excerpt from the book below)
Cost $30
Register by Friday, Feb 21 • A Zoom link will be sent upon registration.
Shivani Lucki is a founding member of Ananda communities in California and Europe, and a foremost proponent and practitioner of Paramhansa Yogananda’s teaching and techniques for self-healing. She is the founder and director of the Life Therapy School for Self-Healing in the Yogananda Academy of Europe. For fifty years she has led seminars and workshops throughout India, Europe and US, helping people to discover their own healing powers.
From Healing with Life Force
Live or Die (from true stories )
Although Samuel had been feeling distinctly unwell, he was reluctant to alarm his family, and so he had said nothing about the pains that were coming with increasing frequency and urgency. “Probably just age,” he thought. Now in his sixties, he had considered retiring from a job that had long since ceased to hold any interest for him.
After a general checkup, the doctor referred him to an oncologist, who announced that he had an inoperable terminal cancer, and that he had perhaps six months to live.
Devastated, Samuel told his family that the doctor said he would die within six months. And from that day he began to die, quitting his job to sit before the television and take the medication the oncologist had prescribed for the symptoms. Profoundly depressed, he fended off the efforts of friends to cheer him with invitations to play cards, enjoy a family dinner, or spend time with his grandchildren. Why bother? He was going to die.
The six-month prognosis proved overly optimistic – after three months, Samuel was gone.
The oncologist who had diagnosed Samuel’s cancer had another patient, Luca, who was roughly the same age as Samuel and had received an identical diagnosis and prognosis. But when Luca revealed the news to his family, he announced that he intended to live his final months to the full.
Luca loved his work and his colleagues. He reduced his hours and redefined his role as helping the others acquire the skills to carry forward the plans they had made together. In his spare time, he took a drawing class that he’d formerly been unable to find time for. The instructor soon discovered that Luca had talent, and within months he had enough sketches for a small exhibition.
Luca was happier than ever. Together with his wife, he traveled to exotic locales, where they experienced a diversity of cultures, food, and customs, making interesting new friends along the way
Luca had found little time to share the lives of his two teenage sons, and now that he began to discover what wonderful youngsters they were, and wanting to leave them with happy memories, he made sure that they were able to share small adventures and spend meaningful time together.
After three months, Luca returned to the oncologist, who announced that the tumor had diminished. At six months, it was smaller still, and after a year it had vanished entirely. Follow-up exams at three, five, and ten years showed him completely cancer-free.
When we close the doors to life, life leaves us. When we embrace life, it embraces us!