September 23, 2025 2nd hour hosted by Dr Michael Ryce continuing to share from his healing crisis, which he described as one of the most productive of his life. He emphasized that what many people call “illness” is in fact a healing process, with bacteria and viruses serving as cleanup crews for decaying tissue rather than causes of disease. Drawing on both naturopathic insights and his own experience, he explained how the body uses crises to clear out stored toxicity. He used the metaphor of a dead rabbit attracting bugs in a field to illustrate that imbalance in the body creates the environment for microbes, not the other way around. He underscored that while antibiotics may sometimes be necessary, overuse undermines the body’s natural healing design, and natural supports like oregano oil can work with the body to restore balance.
From there, Michael expanded into the spiritual dimensions of healing. He described how Rakhma, an Aramaic term he has long translated as a filter in the frontal lobes for aligning with love, revealed itself to him in this healing process as a physiological interface. This interface, when open, connects directly to the Creator’s inspiration, bringing renewal and restructuring at every level of the body. He connected this to StillPoint breathing, which dissolves resistance and allows the pulses of inspiration to flow freely, restructuring tissues and dissolving generational trauma. He stressed that contraction, fear, and hostility represent the Aramaic concept of “Satan”—not a devil, but the physiological resistance that severs this interface. Remaining open in love keeps the tether to source intact, just as a lifeline connects an astronaut to their ship.
The conversation moved into the sacredness of intimacy. Michael explained that sexuality, when held in a space of honor and cherishing, is a divinely designed avenue for reconnection to source. When misused or distorted by fear and hostility, however, it adds to trauma and disconnection, fueling addiction and exploitation. He highlighted that relationships often suffer when partners unconsciously link hostility or fear to their perception of each other. In these moments, forgiveness becomes crucial. Canceling goals and choosing to set new, loving intentions prevents contraction, reopens the interface, and restores connection. Every apparent conflict thus becomes an invitation to deeper healing and intimacy.
Michael also reflected on past interactions where he had responded directly and bluntly to individuals in denial and viciousness. He explained that while his tone in those rare cases may have sounded harsh, his intent was to confront unconsciousness with clarity, much like Yeshua’s reference to the “generation of vipers.” He noted that Yeshua himself demonstrated this in the Garden of Gethsemane and on the cross—not as despair, but as triumph in staying connected to source despite extreme suffering. The Aramaic phrase “Eli Eli lama sabachthani,” he clarified, was not a cry of abandonment but an exclamation of fulfillment: “Papa, for this I was set aside.” He contrasted this with Greek mistranslations that turned Yeshua’s demonstration into a theology of suffering, when in truth his purpose was to show that love transcends even death.
The show closed with Michael affirming that healing crises, intimacy, relationships, and even suffering all point back to the same truth: the human form is designed as a temple for Love’s presence. When the interface of Rakhma is open, inspiration flows, physiology realigns, and one lives as the conscious, active presence of Love.
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