To become a spritual healer you have to train with the Guild of Spritualist Healers for a term of two years before becoming fully qualified. I am a qualified member of The Guild of Spiritualist Healers. This is normally applied in any of the Spritualist National Union churches up and down the country. If you require spiritual healing you will be invited to make an appointment to see me. I also do absent healing which involves meditation and sending out healing thoughts without you being present. Please contact me for further information.
Spiritual Healing is the channelling of healing energies through the healer to the patient. It re-energises and relaxes a patient to enable their own natural resources to deal with illness or injury in the best possible way. By 'attunement' - perhaps best described as a combination of empathy and intent - either in the presence of the patient or at a distance - and by directing energy, usually through the hands, the healer seeks-to supplement the depleted energy of the recipient, dealing with stress at whatever level it exists and releasing the body's recuperative abilities to deal with the problem in the most effective way for that individual.
Patients receiving healing tend to experience sensations of being re-energised or relaxed, 'pins and needles', heat or coolness, and pain coming to the surface and dispersing indicating that the energies are indeed 'going to work'. Healing can be given for any illness, stress or injury as a therapy which is completely natural, has no side effects and is complementary to any other therapy. It can be helpful in a wide range of physical and psychological conditions, sometimes to a remarkable degree: indeed the medically diagnosed nature of the illness appears to be irrelevant to the outcome, and case histories range from the trivial to the terminal in which healing seems to have made an important, perhaps even over-riding, contribution to recovery. Aside from its value in relieving pain and restoring function, healing is also notable for initiating improvements in patients' attitudes and clarity of thought, and in their quality of life.
Is it necessary to have 'Faith'?
No. Nothing special is asked of the patient except perhaps openness to anything that happens and a degree of trust in the healer. An awareness of the need for change and the motivation to do so can also be helpful.