When touched with a profound mystical experience, the fear of speaking about it can feel daunting, and integrating a newly tapped part of the self can be overwhelming.
You might find yourself wearing an outer mask of normalcy, hiding a phenomenal awakening that has shaken your inner landscape.
How can you accept a changing sense of self—and perhaps the very nature of reality—while navigating the daily mundane demands of work and family? How can you gently befriend the frightened ego to embrace a powerful force from beyond that has also emerged within you?
Journey into the Unknown to Awaken the Soul and Live in Truth reveals an unexpected passage from fragmentation to wholeness, from hiding to being seen, and from fear to love.
Through astonishing channeled communications, and with a generous dose of vulnerability, Dr. Zemel illuminates a striking dance through the seemingly divergent worlds of professionalism and tonguespeak.
Siri K. Zemel, PhD, holds a doctorate in mind-body medicine with a concentration in healthcare systems. Dr. Zemel has served in behavioral healthcare leadership for the past 15 years, and recently embraced her lifelong gift as a spiritual medium. With a master’s degree in nutrition science, she began her early career as a dietitian. She was raised Catholic, converted to Sikhism, married a Jew, then retired from organized religion altogether. Dr. Zemel is an advocate for integrative healing, including the incorporation of mystical experiences alongside traditional physical and mental healthcare.
“Guided: Journey into the Unknown to Awaken the Soul and Live in Truth” by Siri K. Zemel focuses on her journey of recognising and coming out of the state of psychic instability as she used to speak an unknown foreign language sometimes, out of nowhere, see and feel spirits around her and communicate with them. All this did not stop her from carrying on her normal, professional and personal life. She is an all-rounder. She kept this state of hers a secret and herself was very much curious to unfold this case. So, basically, through this book, she takes her readers on the ride of hers dealing with this and finally connecting back to the truth. The journey isn’t easy but quite knowledgeable and intriguing. Towards the end of the book, she gives a general note related to her way of living and rational thinking and ideas like that.
There’s this quote in this book that I like. “I always believed God to be bigger than religion, and any house of worship offered the same opportunity for divine connection.” This book isn’t a bulky one and easy to read but requires immense patience on the part of the reader. It is an autobiography with a touch of self-help for the people who face the same problem. What I was interested in was how she became the medium between the living and the dead and connected to her grandmother, Nonny, who died because of cancer. I rate this book four out of five. This book is something different from what I have read in a while and of course, helped me with quite a stock of knowledge about things that I would probably not have learned about in general.
This book can not be recommended to a huge community of readers altogether but a numbered people. There is no way to particularly categorizing the type of people that are suited to read this work. So, I’d generally recommend this book to people who are studying, learning and dealing with such cases in any way, whether themselves or as doctors, psychiatrists, etc. trying to help others. This can be a case study and can prove helpful.