The 5 Primary Constraints That Help Us Develop Freedom
Like humanity as a whole, freedom is an evolutionary process that struggles through ever-changing constraints in order to realize its fullest potential.
My newfound sense of freedom was about to be abruptly interrupted; but I didn’t know that yet.
After eight years of debilitating knee pain that had kept me confined to the false safety of indoor gyms, I could finally run and hike mountains again; the euphoria I felt on those trails eclipsed any concerns I had about the rest of my life.
It was fall, 2011, and I had just moved to Colorado in June.
This feeling - of lightness, buoyancy and invincibility as I flung my body down steep rocky trails with wild abandon - was new; and addicting. I had no idea it was possible to feel this good in my body. Chronic pain was something I had woken up to every day since age 13, and for a long time I would have settled for the mere absence of pain. Now I knew better than to aim so low, and I would spend the rest of my life as an emissary of this brand of freedom, which had required that I purposely and consciously aim up.
Pursuing the freedom to run - and succeeding - was an event that forever changed my life, which was about to take another dramatic turn.
Ok, friends - grab your favorite drink (I’m on a matcha kick myself) and find a comfy spot to nestle in…this is the longest newsletter I’ve ever written, and will serve as a pillar post for my new initiative: The Human Freedom Project 🤠
CONSTRAINT #1: THE BODY
Birth. Death. Pain. Disease.
Clenching, tightness, tension; sharp, stabbing, electrical; dull, achy, dense; fatigue, overwhelm, resistance.
Have you ever felt like you and your body are two different animals occupying the same physical space, often with opposing agendas and no rental agreement to be found that can help you figure out who actually owns this place - you, or it?
Maybe you’ve wondered, as I used to:
What is “it” - this body that seems to have a mind of its own - if it isn’t me?
In addition to sensations of joy and pleasure, the body gives us all manner of painful feelings, from the uncomfortable to the downright terrifying, along with symptoms and expressions of disease and sickness. Eventually, the body will wear out or give in to some unforeseen compelling force, and poof…we’ll be gone.
The body is the first, last and most intimate constraint that helps us earn freedom.
After fearing pain in all its manifestations for over two decades, I am here to tell you - as an emissary of that brand of freedom (the kind that aims up) - pain is good data. Pain shows us where we are not (yet) free.
I used to hate my body because of the pain I believed her to be inflicting upon me “for no good reason” I told myself.
Today, I call myself a pain advocate.
The suppression of pain is called trauma.
Similarly, disease and illness are as natural (and necessary) as day and night. Sickness and symptoms are good data. To suppress them creates ongoing trauma, amplifying and prolonging our suffering. The following is something I know to be true with every fiber of my being:
Everything the body does is wise.
One day in late January, 2012, I was on the phone with my dad and a family friend of ours named Jonah (who happens to be a Christian Community priest and my ex-boyfriend from 1998) when Jonah told my dad: “You have to cut her off; she needs to find her own way.”
How embarrassing.
I felt myself shrink into the shadows of fear, humiliation, and an all too familiar feeling of abandonment, while doing my best to portray an outer persona of stoicism. Inside, I was reeling.
What’s wrong with me? I’m 31 years old and I don’t know how to take care of myself financially. What am I going to do?
Steeling myself, I refused to panic this time.
A year prior, my dad had enlisted my help to co-author a book on the evolution of money and human consciousness, paying me a small monthly stipend that barely covered my expenses. This was a friendly gesture he made when I hit financial rock bottom while living in South Carolina. Stepping on people to get them out of pain was not making me much money there, and most people had stopped paying for massages (in the south, at least) after the 2008 financial crash.
Not knowing what else to do and unaware of my options, like so many people I’d simply stopped paying all of my credit cards and student loans. My credit score was tanking fast, and if I didn’t make money - like, that week - I was afraid I would lose my car, which represented freedom in a place like McCormick, where the nearest gym was a 45 minute drive away.
To make matters worse, I had just been pulled over and handed two tickets totaling over $400; one for an illegal U turn, and another for driving without registration (which I couldn’t afford). Staring at the tickets, with no money in my bank account and no job prospects that could possibly give me the necessary income to get the hell outa there (I realllllly disliked living in the south and I was never supposed to be there that long), I broke into hysterical crying due to the overwhelmingly oppressive feeling that I’m sure you’ve felt at least once in your own life. It’s the feeling you get when you say to yourself:
“I will never get out of this financial hole.”
Panic set in the likes of which has taken countless lives around the world when people face debt and economic fears that feel too insurmountable to overcome.
My dad swooped in and gave me just enough help to restore my dignity, and with it - my resolve. His generosity allowed me to make a bid for freedom, and in May of that year (2011) I packed my Subaru with my stepping blocks, some clothes and a few plants, and headed west.
CONSTRAINT #3: MONEY AND ECONOMICS
Yeah, I know. I skipped #2.
I love breaking rules, and this is how the story wanted to flow 🤷🏻♀️.
Money and economics play a pivotal role in shaping modern society and culture, from the ways we revere and revile the rich to the ways that poverty often begets violence, resourcefulness and financial self determination alike. In recent decades, freedom has become practically synonymous with financial wealth, even though we all “know” - logically - that money doesn’t buy happiness or love or enlightenment.
The allure of financial freedom has eclipsed most other human aspirations, and it’s no wonder: while nearly every sector of modern life has seen fit to suppress the free human spirit (which we will talk about extensively at HFP), within the economic system it is still possible to sufficiently flex our muscles of creativity, work ethic and inspired initiative; applying our will to work for something more than survival, we can rise above the oppressive clouds that engulf the rest of humanity.
Within the world of entrepreneurship, the human spirit struggles toward its fullest expression.
The current economic system - corrupted from within by its enmeshment with state powers - rarely affords the free human spirit a dignified existence. Seeing few options for anything else, most of us work to survive instead of contributing our unique talents or labor to a community that values what each has to offer.
My relationship to money began long before I knew what its practical uses were. When I was seven years old, my dad - a coin dealer and money historian - would throw $20 gold pieces into the deep end of our backyard pool for me to retrieve. Enchanted by the sparkling gold shimmering from the watery depths, I would dive again and again and again; my dad’s delight and the adventure of hunting for gold are strongly etched memories in my mind. By the time I could ride a bike, I was already immersed in my dad’s world of coinage, world history and the modern obfuscation of the true spirit of money by the merger of corporate and state powers in the 20th century.
Before I got a driver’s license I knew that the only reason we need one today is because of the birth certificate fraud that turns human beings into debt slaves who bear the burden of government spending that is so out of control it will never be repaid; that we were never supposed to be subjected to income tax in the United States; that most banks don’t actually hold our money (loaning out $9 for every $10 we ask them to “hold”); and the fiat system invented by the Fed is likely to collapse in my lifetime.
History lessons at home, full of quotes like the following, were far more fascinating than the rote indoctrination I was clearly getting in public school.
Some people think the Federal Reserve Banks are US government institutions. They are not… they are private credit monopolies which prey upon the people of the US for the benefit of themselves and their foreign and domestic swindlers, and rich and predatory money lenders. The sack of the United States by the Fed is the greatest crime in history. Every effort has been made by the Fed to conceal its powers, but the truth is the Fed has usurped the government. It controls everything here and it controls all our foreign relations. It makes and breaks governments at will.
Louis T. McFadden, U.S. representative 1915-135
His words echo loudly today, a haunting reminder of the choice we made after he spoke them aloud on the floor of congress in 1927 when he introduced a bill designed stop the Fed from usurping power from the people. He (and others) failed, and the Great Depression ensued; an engineered “opportunity” for state and corporate powers to step in and “save” us.
The freedom to work within an economic system that affords the human soul and spirit a dignified existence is something we all feel called to actualize innately, while the social organism we live within today makes it nearly impossible to manifest.
When my dad ended our book writing project in 2012, he did so in part because he was struggling financially himself; and because he knew Jonah was right.
After working with my dad in his coin business on and off since 1998, I needed to find my own way. With barely enough money to last me four weeks, and no one else who could bail me out, survival impulses fueled by fear took over (hello, constraint #1!) I knew I could help people get out of pain with fascia release, but I was still new in the field and relatively untested with my emerging methodology; I doubted that I could build a full time practice in just 30 days. So I went looking for work.
Unlike my scavenger hunts for gold when I was girl, job hunting felt demoralizing; my adventurous spirit yearned for something loftier to invest itself in. Bills needed to be paid, however, and I was able to secure a job within two weeks. It paid $10/hour and it was in a healing center. “Maybe someday they’d let me offer my services”, I told myself.
During the first four days on the job, my new boss - a six foot tall, very large and bitterly angry woman - took every opportunity to belittle and scold me, repeatedly threatening to fire me if I didn’t perform the job to her complete satisfaction.
All day long I felt my body contract into a nervous system state of freeze. Blood drained from my limbs while my jaw clamped shut to stop me from speaking up; suppressing the growing anger at being treated like this, my gut churned as a deep inner knowing set in: my self respect and dignity demanded that I quit.
With no idea how I would make rent in two weeks, I marched into the owner’s office and told her that the way I was being treated had triggered me into a full on trauma response and that I was quitting on the spot.
Claiming the freedom to fight and to flee (when appropriate) not only rewired my nervous system from similar past traumas, it gave me the necessary launching pad to help others do the same. I didn’t know it at the time, but I would draw from this lesson repeatedly in my work helping clients and online students break through similar trauma patterns that manifest from within the body.
CONSTRAINT #2: RELATIONSHIPS AND SOCIAL LIFE
Arguably the most influential constraint that helps us earn freedom is that of other human beings.
Starting in utero, our mothers and fathers have a profound impact on us, passing down everything from genetics to survival programs and unhealed generational trauma. From our parents and/or caregivers along with siblings, peers and teachers in childhood, to bosses, co-workers, friends, lovers and children…the human world is a social one.
Constraint #1 - the body - is highly informed by constraint #2, which creates all kinds of nervous system based survival programs throughout our childhood (memorized thoughts, feelings and behaviors that I call “nervous system patterns”) that we repeat on automation in adulthood. This is when it started to dawn on me…
Human freedom exists outside the bounds of the nervous system.
Being the object of someone else’s rage and unhealed pain was not new to me when I showed up for that job; it was all too familiar.
Just after my 13th birthday, I was targeted by a 30 year old male neighbor who spent 6 months grooming me after disarming my parents. Already in a perpetual state of emotional shutdown from earlier events in my childhood, I was an obvious and easy target. He succeeded in turning me first against my family, and then against myself. Before long I didn’t trust anyone, which meant there was no one I could turn to for help when he made his true intentions known. For over two years, he violated my body while I fought to regain control over my confused mind. An alcoholic and drug addict, he frequently unleashed his rage on me verbally, physically and sexually.
Even though I was able to summon enough strength to tell him “NO” and end his hold over me in 1995, I was left with a million invisible scars inside my body and soul. And because I had no idea how to locate, let alone face, all of these wounds, I retreated deep inside my body and shrunk my social world to a “safe” size where threats like that were not likely to find me.
My new boss back in 2012 brought all of those suppressed feelings to the surface, and for that - because it gave me the opportunity to release the past and exercise my power outside the influence of my nervous system - and for everything I’ve built since, I am grateful to her.
Relationships and social life are the most painful - and healing - constraint that helps us develop freedom.
The previous summer, I asked my best friend Jess if she would learn to step on me and help me run and hike again. She said “sure, that sounds fun!” and what we did that summer (which I will be writing about in a few weeks) shaped the methodology that became what Kinetix is and stands for today: a collaborative method of partner fascia release that reveals - through our bodies - whatever physical, emotional, nervous system and social wounds are keeping us stuck in patterns of chronic pain, disease, fatigue, overwhelm, fear, resistance, dissociation, numbness etc.
If I asked you which of these 5 constraints (which we’re not done exploring yet) have been the most painful (and healing) for you, I suspect that you would say the same thing as me: relationships and social life.
While we have the potential to be loving, kind, compassionate, open minded and warm towards each other, we also - all of us - have the potential for malevolence.
The courage to face our own evil and take responsibility for the impact we have on each other, and in our world, is an integral aspect of becoming truly free human beings. This helps us face - and stand up to - the evil “out there” from a place of equanimity, understanding and compassion for the human condition.
Driving home, the adrenaline was wearing off as reality set in: I had $300 in my bank account, no credit cards, and no friends or family that were coming to my rescue.
Something totally new, however, was kicking in: an unwavering determination married to a grounded conviction I had never before possessed. By the time I got home, I knew what to do (stress calls potential into play).
A few days later, I’d built myself a new website and ordered business cards. Scouring Craigslist for opportunity, I found a boutique personal training gym that was renting space to health practitioners by the hour. Within a week, I had a place to offer sessions. All I needed were clients.
With one week left before I would need to pay $575 for my share of the rent, and barely $100 left in my bank account, I approached several of the personal trainers at the gym. Confidently declaring that “I help people get out of pain with an active form of fascia release that involves stepping on people,” I offered each of them a free session.
Intrigued, four personal trainers scheduled sessions with me on the spot; all four were in pain. One of them, a devoted BJJ (Brazilian Jiu Jitsu) student, had a persistent groin strain that had been bothering him for months. Twenty minutes later he was pain free and dumbfounded. He was so impressed that he immediately told his client Andrew to come talk to me.
Andrew was a professional BJJ fighter and owner of a local BJJ studio. Though he was young (in his early 30’s), he had just been told by one of the best physical therapists in Boulder that he had pre-arthritis in his hands and he would have to quit Jiu Jitsu or face a life of crippling hand and arm pain. He also had knee pain that hadn’t resolved after surgery, and chronically aching shoulders. During that first session, he told me I had forever ruined him on massages and he was sold on this method for life.
That day, Andrew bought a package of 10 sessions from me for $675, and that was it! I never looked back. He was my most vocal supporter, referring more clients to me than anyone else during my 8 years in Boulder. We completely reversed his pre-arthritis, something I’ve done many times since.
The other three trainers - one with shoulder pain, another with knee pain and the last with hip pain - all got out of pain during their free sessions. They each sent clients to me that week, and all of those people bought packages.
Writing this today from California, I feel a mix of nostalgia, awe and gratitude. The relationships I formed with these clients formed the bedrock of my career, and I will never forget them.
Given my own history of chronic pain rooted in childhood trauma, it wasn’t surprising that soon I was attracting a lot of people like me into my private practice. Traumas linked to chronic pain were unearthed and untangled; stories were shared, tears were shed and freedom was cultivated.
Kinetix evolved from a fascia release modality into a complete scientific methodology for mapping root causes of pain and dis-ease. I was working with people who had been given labels like fibromyalgia, myofascial pain syndrome, scleroderma, chronic fatigue syndrome, Crohn’s disease, multiple sclerosis, lupis, rhematoid arthritis and chronic pain issues that no doctors or physical therapists were able to help them resolve. I have repeatedly seen that these issues are reversible for people who are ready to explore the totality of the body-soul connection, and do the necessary work to free themselves.
For several years, I was warned against pursuing the path I was on, which was to boldly and publicly proclaim that the body and soul (psyche) are inseparable; that there is no working with fascia without working with the nervous system, and no working with the body without engaging with a person’s soul, including all the traumas and memories held there.
Thankfully, I was (and still am) unlicensed and therefore unregulated. I cannot be told what the “scope of my practice” is by any state sanctioned governing board. The relationships I have with my clients are private, bound by trust and contractual in nature, which means they cannot be breached by the state.
But it wasn’t the state giving me veiled threats or worrying aloud about the legality of my emerging work; it was my state educated peers. Licensed psychotherapists, physical therapists and massage therapists.
When I started teaching Kinetix earnestly to aspiring practitioners, positioning it as a method that addresses the whole human being, this issue created so much relationship turmoil that I was compelled to stop teaching. Some students were adament they did not sign up to learn about “the soul;” they wanted knowledge and skills they could apply to the body; and they wanted to become “Certified Practitioners” (something I was on the fence about then, and am now committed to never offering, which I will write about another time). We have been - collectively - under a spell (many, in fact).
We have been hypnotized to believe the body can be separated from the psyche; that emotions and sensations are unconnected events; that pain is physical and emotions are “mental.”
We know these are lies because we’ve all LIVED the truth! Yet the spell persists.
Turning inwards, there were a few dragons I had to confront in the dark depths of my own soul before I could bring myself to consider teaching again.
The freedom to address the WHOLE human organism - as a practitioner, teacher, YouTuber, writer, mentor - is something I finally have the moral courage to stand for with unwavering conviction. Thankfully, humanity is beginning to wake up from this particular spell.
CONSTRAINT #4: THE STATE
Humans created the state. Individuals uphold - and defend - its power.
Instead of creating educational institutions that seek a true understanding of the whole human organism (for example), in most of the developed world we have state run institutions financed by corporate giants who funnel people through silos of indoctrination intent on dividing and subdividing the human being into its tiniest component parts in order to create licensed and regulated specialists who know nothing of the whole; instead, they dole out costly prescriptions by the sponsors of their education, or generic protocols that rarely work.
Psychotherapists are forbidden - legally - from touching their patients. Body workers are told it’s “outside their scope of practice” to address both pain and trauma with their clients. Doctors, meanwhile, are either generalists - applying generic knowledge to unique people without much success; or specialists - myopically focused on “the feet” or “the heart” or “the vascular system” to the exclusion of the rest of the body, and more importantly: the unique human being standing before them.
Modern politicized education (which, in a healthy social organism would belong to the spiritual domain of human life, not the political or economic) is exceptional at two things above all:
Turning human beings into semi-obedient servants of the state who outsource authority over most aspects of their life.
Churning out semi-productive cogs for the state (tax payer) funded corporate machine.
We are not very good (yet) at producing human beings who can think for themselves, practice open mindedness in all matters, source authority from within and initiate a life of creative freedom for themselves and their community.
“The state” I believe should be viewed differently than government. While government, in its purest form, could be a benevolent force that we all participate in as responsible citizens, what we have today in most of the world is a merger between state and corporate powers; a hungry monster that is gorging itself on the labor and lives of the masses.
Increasingly, the state encroaches on all aspects of life with politicized education, politicized medicine and health mandates, politicized science, entertainment, social media, “news”…
Through constraint #1 - the body, with its programmable nervous system that automates behavior - along with constraint #2 - relationships and social life, which constantly tempts us towards group think as a survival strategy - human beings are highly susceptible to psychological manipulation, and there are powers in this world that know it and use it to suit their agendas. We are not helpless victims.
The truth is:
These state and corporate powers are a reflection of us - the populace.
The social and political sicknesses we face today are symptomatic of a deeper soul sickness affecting us all: we have not (yet) made ourselves into responsible, spiritually mature adults that are capable of self governance.
Since people created both the state and the economic system, then the only hope we have of changing “the system” is to change ourselves first.
To become truly free, we must devote ourselves to self knowledge, and above all: a true understanding of the whole human organism. Knowledge of the whole human organism inspires courage, goodness and love; the suppression of this knowledge causes pain, sickness and an anti-social world.
This leaves us with one final constraint.
I’m a Leo, with Leo rising and moon in Sagittarius - triple fire! 🔥😆
I grew up climbing trees, making gnome homes out of moss and twigs, riding my bike down the steepest hills in town and spending as much time in the sunshine as I possibly could. When I was in first grade I came home one day and told my mom “we are not allowed to use any plastic from now on, because it kills whales!”
In 2007 I experienced acute mold poisoning; I’ve been severely sensitive to mold and chemical toxicity ever since.
After moving to Colorado in 2011 - after 6 years in the south - my spirit soared with the abundance of sunshine, blue skies and majestic mountains. For many years I enjoyed robust physical, emotional and mental health, in large part because of my new surroundings.
Then, in 2018, I got severely ill with mercury poisoning after moving to a new home. Naturally (being me) I relentlessly pursued the true root cause before trying to detox. Months of research along with several blood, urine and hair analysis tests ruled out food, water and stored mercury from my mom. It had to be airborne.
My hypothesis at the time was fracking, which explodes the crust of the earth where elemental mercury is found. Thousands of fracking wells surrounded my new house on 3 sides, causing the orange-brown air polluting the front range of Colorado.
This experience was so painful for me - socially - that I’m still tending a few unhealed wounds five years later. Getting physically sick was hard, but bearable; the way my community reacted to my investigative nature and the data I brought forward, which suggested that the airborne mercury was not just poisoning me, but many of us living in the area (11 out of 17 people that tested themselves at my request during this investigation had alarmingly high levels like me), triggered another layer of latent trauma needing to be healed. But that’s a story for another time.
Currently, I live in Southern California. I moved here for the sunshine.
Instead of feeling warmed by the sun, I feel like Mark Twain who said “the coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco.” I feel chilled to the bone nearly every moment of every day here, even with my heat turned up to 85 degrees. But I know this weather is not natural.
Chemtrails cover the sky and bleed into a chronic white haze that binds to the marine layer, painting the world blue-gray and blocking out the sun for months on end. I’ve counted only a handful of sunny days in 6+ months. When the sun does come out, the light reminds me of the eclipse I saw on my birthday in 2017 - pale, eerie, devoid of its naturally warm tones. Crickets chirp in the mornings now, and the sun loving lizards that were so common when I moved here have all but disappeared.
When I go out in the sun these days, instead of getting tan, my skin puffs up with fluid and breaks out in a bumpy rash; last summer when I went backpacking in the high Sierras and climbed Mt. Langley (a 14er), I came home looking like a Chernobyl victim (this is no exaggeration; I have photos, and witnesses). My cousin just told me he can’t go in the sun without getting rashes, and it happens to Stefan too.
With the normalization of weather events like “bomb cyclones” and “atmospheric rivers;” with the alarming amount of surfactants creating white suds in all bodies of water now, including parking lot puddles and the beach; and with the politicized issue of “climate change” (which I won’t go into today), this issue - chemtrails - is now at the top of my priority list to bring awareness to.
I’ve been watching chemtrails evolve since the early 2001; they changed three years ago, in precise tandem with the “pandemic;” the light on planet earth hasn’t been the same since. Try this: on the next sunny day, go outside and put your fist over the sun (so you don’t go blind) and then look at the sun; you’ll see a halo of white haze surrounding it. Those are the chemicals permeating our atmosphere causing untold changes to UV and infrared light waves hitting our planet (and our bodies).
The freedom to to speak up, even though I may be judged and labeled a crazy “conspiracy theorist”; to raise awareness within my community about the state of our environment; the freedom to know what is true instead of what is convenient or popular…these and more have been a daily curriculum that I’ve struggled through my whole life in order to painfully find my voice, and my backbone, and my moral courage.
CONSTRAINT #5: ENVIRONMENTS, NATURAL AND UNNATURAL
Day. Night. Space. Black holes. Light. Electromagnetism. Mountains, rivers, oceans…
From planet to cosmos and natural wonders to man-made poisons, our environment shapes and impacts our biology and psychology, our physiology and social behavior.
Geography has a profound effect on us energetically, and we all feel “at home” or at our healthiest in certain places on this planet. For me, it’s the mountains.
Then, there’s our everyday environment(s).
Goethe said “architecture is frozen music." Right angles are known to be antagonistic to human health, while curves create phononic harmony that nourishes us vibrationally. Most of our buildings today are squares and rectangles.
Nearly all homes are built with toxic glues and formaldehyde treated particle board. We bring chemicals of all kinds into our homes, and spray antibiotics, pesticides, herbicides, fungicides and sanitizer on everything. We inject ourselves with poisons, or swallow them in pill form. Our food lacks nutrients because the soils have been poisoned to death. We stare at blue light screens all day, wear plastic clothes and our feet rarely touch the earth.
Nature and the creator (source, god) of life - the great architects of human biology - knew what they were doing when they designed us.
What we do to the earth, we do to ourselves.
With permeable bodies (hello constraint #1!) that absorb beneficial microorgisms, water molecules and poisons alike through skin, eyeballs and with every intake of breath, we cannot outrun our own ignorant and malevolent behavior.
Like each of the former constraints, the environments we find ourselves in - both natural and unnatural - show us where we are not (yet) free.
Freedom doesn’t belong to the individual alone; it develops primarily through our relationships to each other; to our world; and to our collective creations: money, governments, technology, chemicals…
Welcome to The Human Freedom Project!
Founded by Stefan Cox and Elisha Celeste, this initiative seeks to illuminate the 5 primary constraints that help us develop human freedom. Through the soon to launch long form podcast with guests that we believe can help us understand what we’re grappling with regarding each of these constraints, with weekly writings from me (Elisha), and a membership option (coming soon), our mission is to offer practical guidelines to become more free in all areas of life.
The 5 primary constraints that help us develop freedom:
the body
relationships and social life
money and economics
the state
environments - natural, and unnatural
While each of these constraints could be seen as isolated phenomena to be studied - and understood - as separate from each other, an objective examination of reality reveals quite clearly the interpenetrating and inseparable nature of all five. Everything is connected.
In the coming weeks, I will be diving into the two most important constraints - the body, and relationships/social life - as well laying out a foundation for exploring what it means to be human, and what “human freedom” is - practically and spiritually speaking. We will seek the truth together in pursuit of freedom.
Whew!
Thank you for being here. Now - I’d love to see you in the comments section 😊
With love,
Elisha
WOW .. and on top of everything I've been a member of The Christian Community for 30 years. I'm eager to learn the stepping :)
Oh my goodness. I am so excited to have found you. Thank you. You articulate so many of my own thoughts. I'm overwhelmed with agreement and have so much to say, but I'm going to stick with the following: Thank you, I'm so glad to have found you, keep going, and I can't wait for more.