Distance, Virtual and in person Shamanic Healing
Receive support and deep healing with Keath and benevolent nature spirits and guides in person or in the comfort of your own home.
Shamanism is the practice of connecting with benevolent spirits of nature and other compassionate helping spirits for deep healing. Shamanic healing creates a bridge between the worlds to bring about profound shifts in energy. Sessions often involve soul retrievals, cord cuttings, clearing and protection.
The word shaman originates from the term ‘saman’ from the Evanki tribe, a Tungus-speaking people of Siberian Russia to whom I offer gratitude and respect. The word is now used to describe this way of healing as practiced in many cultures from all over the world.
Scroll down to learn more about why I use this word.
Your Choice
In a distance Shamanic healing, you speak with Keath for 30 minutes on zoom and then he journeys and conducts a healing on his own time on your behalf and sends you a recording of his findings. This is less of a time and money commitment for you.
In a virtual shamanic healing you are on zoom with Keath for 90 minutes and he listens to your sharing, conducts a healing in real time and then listens to you share your experience while he shares his insights from your healing time.
In person shamanic healing is very powerful. To experience this book a ceremonial bodywork session.
Not sure which session type is right for you?
What people are saying
“I don't think I can quite put this session into words. I received messages from my Higher Power and about past lives; I felt long-lost parts of me returning; I felt in an embodied way just how deeply loved I am. This was a deeply spiritual experience above and beyond my wildest dreams. I will for sure be back”
“Something big shifted after having two sessions with Keath. I felt lighter, and a deep release within my emotional body. There was a sense of feeling truly seen and heard in the container he creates. I walked away feeling much better than before, and the session continues to serve me months later!”
The words shaman shamanism and shamanic have been problematic when attribution hasn’t been given to the origins of the word and when it has been used as a generalization and misunderstanding of indigenous cultures.
I have been practicing shamanism for over 30 years, holding space for people to make profound energetic shifts and receive healing on a deep cellar level that awakens a heightened state of consciousness and reconnects them with the truth and essence of who they are. I practice shamanism in my ceremonial bodywork sessions and virtual shamanic sessions. Most of what I do in a shamanic session, I did not learn from any teacher for any class, these skills have come naturally to me since I was a child. Read here to learn more about the teachers that have supported me on my journey as a healing practitioner.
In an effort to avoid cultural appropriation I sought a word to replace shamanic in my work. I tried using animism and even created a word transanimystical! But what I found is that many people do not know what those words mean and people who needed this form of healing couldn’t find me. I have returned to the word shamanic so I can better be of service to people who seek this profound form of healing. I am open to conversation about this issue.