Category Archives: garden

Tend the garden of your life with the Soul Code Method

Our conscious selves like to believe we are perfect infinite beings who are simply having a mortal experience. We simply need to intend the right things and all we want will follow. This is a true to a point. Our conscious self can believe anything it wants but unless our subconscious self also believes it, we will get frustrated in our lack of development and wonder what happened even though we are sure we are doing everything right and we must be firmly on our path.

In the end, the proof is in the pudding. If things are not as we want, something is missing. Some of us can release negative energy until the cows come home but we will be no closer to our goals than if we had not released any negative energy at all because that is not our real problem. Our problem is knowing what to do to move forward. If we lack the knowledge whether consciously or subconsciously, we will not know what to do to finally pick ourselves up and move.

Each person is configured differently than the next with no two people being the same, not even twins. If we are having problems in something, we are either blocked, disconnected or incorrectly wired to get the information we want or a mix of all these. This has to do with our energy types, the configuration we were sent to Earth with for our mortal experience. Once we figure out our energy type and learn to work with it and use it as leverage rather than a hurdle, we will be able to function better and reach our goals in all areas.

Garden gnome

Life gardening is important!

One of the easiest ways to get around your personal energy type without knowing what it is is to simply constantly do what I call “tending your garden”. Your garden is your life. Using a garden metaphor is a great way to not fall into the psycho-analysis trap (which is rarely helpful). Tending your garden includes everything you would do in a real physical garden but is done on the energetic level using the The Soul Code Basic Chart. Every garden is different just like every person is different yet all gardens require constant, consistent care to become beautiful and fruitful. This means weeding once in a season will not be useful in the end. This means proper soil preparation at the beginning and throughout is essential to get the fruit you want. You might have some good seeds but if the soil is wrong or they do not get enough of the right nutrition or enough water or light, they will not grow or will die before getting anywhere. This also means that too much light, water, nutrition will kill parts of the garden. Then of course there are the outside pests and the inside diseases that can occur in the garden of your life.

It is a very good idea to get to know your own garden and what needs to be done to tend it and increase its yield. Muscle testing is one way of intuiting this and I highly recommend it for those who are good at muscle testing their own selves. Of course any practitioner can do it for you as well. It is important to pick a person who is really good with their own garden so they can watch out for common pitfalls in gardening. A normal gardening manual is a great way to get started!

If you don’t know much about gardening and don’t have a gardening manual handy, here are a few questions to start you off. Muscle test the answers to these questions and determine if changes need to be made. Then use the The Soul Code Basic Chart to make them as well as taking conscious effort to follow through. If the conscious effort does not go smoothly and easily, that is an indication that something else needs to be adjusted or cared for to allow better access to what you need.

Here are a few questions to ask self (use your intuition for additional ones!)

      • Do I have a large enough garden for the life I want?
      • Do I have enough garden resources to handle the life I want?
      • Do I have enough seeds or transplants for the garden I want?
      • Has the ground been prepared properly for my life mission garden?
      • Do I want to have a garden? or do I want to live on someone else’s garden?
      • Am I willing to put in the work to care and tend this garden? If yes, what is keeping me from doing what needs to be done?
      • Do I want a fuller life than just working on my life mission garden? (if so, go back to the list beginning with this in mind)

Have fun with your garden! This is the most important garden you will ever tend! If you want help with your garden – don’t hesitate to make an appointment with me!