The Flow of Wisdom: How to Receive Without Interrupting the Divine
An Introductory Teaching for the Mystery School of Ascension
There’s a moment on the path of awakening where everything goes quiet. You’ve learned you are more than your body. You’ve felt the illusion of the world peel away. You’ve answered the call to rise. And suddenly… silence.
It feels like stepping onto a college campus meant for ascended masters—with no one in sight. A sacred silence. A void. And yet, you are here. You’ve graduated the school of life. Now what?
You become what you were seeking.
The Light.
The Teacher.
The Vessel.
But before you can teach, you must learn how to truly receive.
Receiving is a Sacred Skill
Most people were never taught how to learn. Not really. We were taught how to respond. How to impress. How to perform. But not how to absorb wisdom. And wisdom flows like water—it must be received fully before it can be understood.
If you interrupt the flow, you lose the lesson.
When someone speaks from a place of divine insight, there is a current moving through them. That current—what some call the Holy Spirit, or Source Light—delivers not just words, but frequency. Truth coded in vibration. It enters through the crown, and if your heart is clear, it is received. If it is not, your ego will filter or block it. It will feel triggering, confusing, or even annoying. That’s your sign to sit. Listen. And breathe it in.
Why Helping Isn’t Always Helping
Big hearts often struggle with this. We want to help, to offer advice, to fix. But unsolicited help is often a boundary violation, even when done with love. Especially in moments of grief, trauma, or deep transition, people aren’t asking for you to fix them. They’re asking to be seen.
To truly serve someone is to ask:
What are they actually requesting?
How can I meet them where they are?
Am I offering this for them or because I need to feel helpful?
Until help is asked for, hold space. Let them arrive in their own time.
The Divine Lecture Hall
When you sit before a teacher, a guide, a transmission—treat it as sacred. Whether that’s a human teacher or Source itself, honor the flow.
You don’t interrupt a river.
You don’t argue with a thunderstorm.
You don’t edit divine wisdom mid-delivery.
You receive.
And if a question arises, you write it down. You wait. You return to it later. Often, the answer comes before the teaching ends. But only if you let it finish.
Learning How to Learn Again
For many—especially those neurodivergent or wounded by years of invalidation—this is hard. My own husband, for instance, struggled with school. No one taught him how to learn. He felt stupid, overlooked, mocked. But he is brilliant. He simply never learned how to sit in silence and receive the lesson without interrupting.
When we met, I noticed this. As I taught, he would interrupt constantly—questions, clarifications, tangents. And then I saw it:
He didn’t know how to receive. Because no one had ever honored him enough to expect that he could.
And so I told him: “No one ever taught you how to shut up and learn something, did they?”
We laughed. He listened. And then he began to truly learn.
When the Student Becomes the Master… and Back Again
I’m seeing this lesson now in others too. In friends who interrupt my teachings to offer their own. In those who resist truth because they believe their way is already correct. In every moment, we are either student or teacher, often both. But when one is speaking with divine clarity—be still.
Wisdom cannot be forced.
It must be received.
The Lighthouse Has No Legs
I say this often:
The lighthouse does not chase ships.
It stands. It shines. It becomes the thing it once searched for in the dark.
If you’ve found this page, maybe you’re here at the beginning of your ascension. Maybe you’re standing on that quiet campus. Unsure of what comes next. This is it.
Learn how to receive.
Let the light pour in.
Let the river run.
And when the time comes… you will know what to give back.