Becoming a Spiritual Life Coach: A Journey I Was Destined For

Published on 21 May 2025 at 11:31

Becoming a spiritual life coach wasn’t just a career decision—it was something I was meant to do. Deep down, I’ve always known I wanted to make a difference in the world. I’ve always wanted to help people heal and grow. But I also knew one thing for sure: the medical field wasn’t for me (I don’t do well with blood!).

What I’ve come to realize is that helping others doesn’t always require a stethoscope or scrubs. Many of us walk around carrying invisible wounds—emotional traumas, painful memories, deep-rooted fears. We want more from life. We want to break free from what’s holding us back, but we don’t always know how. That’s where I come in.

My own journey toward healing and transformation began when I hit my lowest point. I was taking medications to manage my depression and anxiety, but something still felt off. When I lost my dad and found myself unable to fully grieve, I realized that numbing the pain wasn’t the same as healing it. I didn’t want to just survive anymore—I wanted to feel, to heal, to truly live.

So I turned inward. I prayed. I spent time in nature. I studied spirituality and healing. I searched for inner peace like my life depended on it—because, in many ways, it did.

It wasn’t an overnight transformation, and it’s not a perfect journey. There are still days when I struggle, when I question, when I feel lost. But in those moments, I return to my practice. I reconnect with my guides. And every time, they lead me back to myself… to my purpose.

Being a spiritual life coach means I get to walk alongside others as they find their own paths to healing. I get to hold space for transformation, for clarity, for peace. And every time someone discovers that they can change their life, that they are worthy of joy, that they do have a purpose—it reaffirms why I’m here.

This isn’t just what I do. It’s who I am.

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