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Devin Grace:
An Anecdote for Modern Life
by Sydney L. Murray

 

Devin Grace is more than a client. She is a friend and a teacher. I am blessed to have the opportunity to work with her on some health and personal issues. I have been awed and amazed by her insight. I am grateful for her presence in my life. Recently I had the opportunity to discuss our November theme of Modern Living with her.

devin grace vision magazine


Vision Magazine: Our theme this month is Modern Culture. What part of our culture here in America do you believe is the most detrimental to our well-being?
Devin Grace: I don’t necessarily believe that any part of our culture is detrimental to our well-being, because everything in this world in this form is a contrast, being used as a contrast, to help people awaken to the memory of who they truly are, which is their oneness with God. So we’ve met the goal, our own mind, forgetfulness of who we are, on culture, on addiction, or on electronics, or whatever it might be. But the truth is, is that the culture is just a response to what’s already going on in our own minds. Is that detrimental? What’s detrimental to all of us is not the culture, but how we may or may not take responsibility for our own thought systems, which then create the culture around us. What’s most detrimental to our culture is our own misguided thought systems, our own misperceptions.


VM: What would be an example of misguided perceptions?
DG: Not necessarily misguided perceptions, but misperceptions. So, everything other than your oneness with God, your experience of peace within yourself, within the world, is a misperception. Everything. Whether it’s a child dying, whether it’s an addiction, whether it’s an abusive relationship, or abuse on animals, this is just simply our misperception, our belief that we have separated ourself from the love that is. That’s the cause; everything else is an effect. So what’s most detrimental is that we believe that all these effects are the cause, which is in our own mind, believing that we are separate. And with that belief that we’re separate, we feel guilty and we feel punishable. But we’re not. We’ve never been separate. We’re completely innocent, we’re completely whole. We’ve never left that love.


VM: What would be a way that people might reconnect with the oneness?
DG: One way to really connect is: start to feel. A lot of people block deep feelings that have been stored inside of them for ages. They act out from that place of stored memory, stored data, that is just stored in there, and it acts out in their daily life. So starting to feel that stuff you don’t want to feel. Feeling is a great way to start to slowly and gently remember who you are and remember your innocence. Because feeling is the first thing that might get shut down or certain emotions might get shut down, so starting to open to that is a way to start opening back up. And then that opening leads to kind of an experience of, wait a second, I’m not this anger…wait a second, I’m not this greed…I’m not even this happiness. They’re all just symbolic. They’re not the true experience of who we are. They’re still symbols. I see a symbol in my life, whether it’s anger, fear, happiness, joy, it’s still symbolic whether we want more of the joy and happiness than most because that shows that we’re closer in our right-mindedness. But still, settling with just that little bit of happiness or that little bit of joy, you don’t even want to settle for that because you don’t want to see that it’s just symbolic. That’s just a grain of sand in the happiness and bliss that could be experienced through awakening to the memory of who you are.


VM: If there were one aspect of our society that you feel is very positive at this point in history, what would it be?
DG: I think the most positive thing in our culture right now is that we are starting to get the tools literally delivered to us on how to start to awaken. Two books that I find incredibly powerful are: “The Disappearance of the Universe,” which I mentioned in my last interview, and “Zero Limits,” which is a direct guide on how to use a spiritual approach that quickens your remembering, who you are. It’s a Hawaiian spiritual practice, called Ho’oponopono healing: I love you. I am sorry. Please forgive me. Thank you. And “Zero Limit” is very accessible to anyone who reads it.
The positive things in our culture that are coming through are literally delivered to us from our higher selves. And they come in the form of books, or maybe movies, or people. There are so many positive things because it’s our higher selves coming through and saying, you’re on the right track, two thumbs up, keep going. Anything that reminds us to take responsibility—100 percent responsibility—for ourselves. Anything that says, take responsibility, because it’s really time for everybody to just grow up. We’re so used to blaming the culture, blaming this, or blaming that, or blaming the president, or blaming another country, or blaming our parents. It doesn’t mean that you can’t say, understanding or recognizing, okay, this is here in front of me, for me to forgive, for me to clear within myself, because if it weren’t already in me, it wouldn’t be showing up in my life.
So when I work with clients, the whole time I’m working with them, I am literally saying, I am sorry for the data and memory in me that shows up as this in you. And then I ask my guidance, please help me to forgive myself for thinking that I am separate from the oneness, from God. And then I thank God directly. It’s while we’re at the sessions, while I’m working with these clients, and I’m getting downloaded with all this information. But I know that this client is here with this issue because there’s something in me that’s also responsible for even showing up. If it’s their problem, it’s mine. It doesn’t mean that when you say you’re 100 percent responsible, that you’re guilty. It’s just, grow up, start to take responsibility for your own fact system.


VM: How would you describe what you do?
DG: It’s so funny because you’d think after all these years, that I’d be able to describe it, but even as I’m saying this, I’m filled with this gratitude in my heart that there’s almost no description. It’s literally being given information about a person, where they need to take responsibility in themselves. So I’m able to see things that are going on in them—data and memories blocked from their consciousness. I’m able to do this—it’s not because I’m special, not because I’m gifted—only because I’ve worked on it, I’ve always worked on it, since I was 17. It’s been my only focus. Again, I’m not gifted; we’re all equally gifted in this way. It’s just that I pay attention, I listen, and I have committed my life to it.
I’ve committed my life to advancing the skill that was already there, advancing the skill to such a height that I’m able to see, literally see, what somebody is hiding, what data and memories are hiding in them I need to help pull out so I can forgive it in myself, help forgive it in them, and also bring it to their awareness so that we can literally shift. And shift out of that consciousness. I can see past life information—past life meaning, something just happening in the hologram of what we call time. I can see things that are going to get re-symbolized in this lifetime anyway, so I don’t really need to go into past life regressions; I’m just saying, for my work, if I can just bring what is getting re-symbolized in this lifetime, then great, we just nip it in the bud right there.


VM: How has working with all of your clients over the years changed your life?
DG: Mostly it’s changed my life by making me really aware of how responsible I am for my own thought systems. And how much I want to take that responsibility and heal it. So others and myself don’t have to suffer. I have really gotten over and over again that I have to do my own work on my own thought systems. And it’s also changed me in that hearing people’s stories and going into people’s data and memory and just loving people unconditionally. Let’s just deal with it. I am amazed in how many ways the ego can show up and I am so grateful to see these ways the ego shows up so I don’t have to fall for its stupid tricks anymore.
It’s changed me and I have a lot of gratitude. My clients don’t even realize how much they help in my own awakening. And of remembering who I am. I love to be trusted to go with them into these places. I know how trustworthy I am because this work has shown me that I am trustworthy because I can go anywhere with them. I don’t care how deep or how dark, how shameful for them, because I go there in my own self.


Devin Grace’s work is remarkable and I am in gratitude for her work. Please visit her Web site, www.devingrace.com. You can contact her by calling 1.800.980.7636 or e-mailing information@DevinGrace.com.

 

 

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