The Magic of Vortex Healing

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"It’s very rare to meet someone who knows about VortexHealing,” Simon tells me as I lay on the massage table in the living room of his six-floor West Village walkup. “There are only nineteen ‘Merlins’ (Vortex teachers) in the world, but you’ll see, in ten years it will be as popular as Reiki.”

Simon Deacon, is a Reiki master himself, but became interested in VortexHealing after having work done on him at a friend’s party in the city. “It was wonderful!” his face glows when telling me about the experience. As coincidence would have it, he caught sight of a torn-up flyer advertising VortexHealing classes at a local supermarket not long after that fateful party. He attended the first attunement and has been practicing for six years now.

“What makes VortexHealing different is it doesn’t just heal what’s in your body but the reality around you by working with divine consciousness. People often incur magical experiences after a healing. They may get a job that has been eluding them. They may find love or run into a long-lost acquaintance.”

But that’s not the only thing that makes VortexHealing different, and very strange. It has a fantastical history so rich in legend and myth, that it seems like a D&D fan's imagination ran completely amuck. According to the VortexHealing website, their story began 5,600 years ago with a divinely incarnated man named Mehindra. After his death, he worked with seven other beings to create a link between the “divine healing realm” and human consciousness. Then in 753 BC, Mehindra (calling himself Merlin) appeared to a man in England and passed on the VortexHealing teachings. This continued on to other teachers (called Merlins) by means of energetic transmissions, passing through the infamous Merlin of King Arthur lore, that is unitl 1247, when for lack of suitable candidates, the lineage suddenly died off.

In 1994, Merlin made a comeback visit in a vision to the founder of VortexHealing, Ric Weinman, who then took it upon himself to resurrect this ancient knowledge system.

“If he really did exist, the name Merlin would be appropriate for the kind of magic we do,” Simon says in a humble, anything-is-possible tone. “When we talk about magic we have to throw out what we see in the movies or TV,” he cautions. “Magic is that universal fabric that we’re all connected to. Everything is energy and we’re all a part of it. But whether you believe in Merlin, divine consciousness, or magic, it doesn’t really matter. What matters is that it works.”

Simon then begins a strange, wonderful, and rather intricate healing process. I have been dealing with a certain chakra issue that just won’t go away. The energy gets mixed up in stressful situations as painful vibrations bubble up to the surface. I’ve been trying Reiki for months and I’m hoping Simon might help take up the energy healing a notch.

The procedure involves several pleasant and unusual steps. Simon "manifests invisible conduced energy crystals” along my body that create "a healing energy grid.” He “fluffs my aura,” dusting off the energy fields and raising the vibration levels. Like a wizard, he sends out “healing structures” from the tips of his finger, which weave into different parts of my body. He even casts “spells,” magical incantations to heal the kidneys, the liver, even awaken dormant potentials within the spirit and body. According to Simon, the procedure is multi-layered, and multi-dimensional, connecting me with divine consciousness and my higher purpose.


The healing work is warm, calming, but also very powerful. It’s like someone has turned up the Reiki-nob to eleven. I can actually feel Simon’s precise energetic movements and the healing work each step is meant to accomplish. He undoes two "karmic knots" from the back of my head, later telling me how unresolved negative patterns will immediately start working themselves out.

 

Then, the grand moment comes when he attempts to release the gremmies, deep blocks within my problem chakra. I can feel him dig in there and grab those little suckers and at first it’s a little painful, but then he pulls them out, like miniature vortexes themselves, and what do you know, they release. He does this several times, and I can feel the chakra area clear up and suddenly, instead of feeling like a boiling pot of water, the whole energy flow is nothing but smooth, calm waters.

 

I leave the session feeling healthier than ever before, wondering if maybe my reality will start shifting as Simon had mentioned – is there a long lost friend, a job, or other potentials waiting for me around the next bodega? My brain is still on overdrive trying to make sense of all the spells, energy crystals, aura fluffing, and the rest. But then I think of Simon's earlier advice. “Whether you believe in Merlin, divine consciousness, or magic, it doesn’t really matter. What matters is that it works.”

 

There’s one thing my logical mind or the problem chakra can’t deny - VortexHealing actually worked.

 

Picture: Creative Commons: Vortex House

For more info, check out Simon’s website.

 

Comments

a little bit skeptical

Hi Jonathan,

 

Your description of this practice raises alarm bells of mild skepticism in me.  The most dubious aspect for me is the concocted lineage, which sounds designed to put people in a suggestible state just by having to pay attention to a story that cannot be verified. I suppose a lot of these types of healing paths work in that way - bypassing the rational mind and engaging the subconscious directly. But how does one reach any kind of discriminatory judgment about the validity or non-validity of such a practice? 

 

That should be a database of anecdotal evidence that  compares and contrasts claims and experiences of alternative healing modalities in some kind of rigorous way.

 

We also need a more sophisticated and nuanced way of thinking about how these disciplines might actually function. In "2012", I discussed the physicist Amit Goswami's  concept of subtle energy systems being quantum phenomena that exist in consciousness, and are then mapped onto the physical body. Still this doesn't say anything about the possible origin of these systems, or how you differentiate between their often nebulous claims. 

 

"Will the transformation."-Rilke

Magic beans, bite by bite.

There seems to be a logical disconnection between the statement “In 1994, Merlin made a comeback visit in a vision to the founder of VortexHealing, Ric Weinman, who then took it upon himself to resurrect this ancient knowledge system” and the website’s claim of “VortexHealing cannot be taught; it must be given by transmission, by a certified teacher who has received the Vortex-Transmission Star from the lineage. Without this, transmission of this healing art is not possible.” Clearly there was no transmission between 1247 and 1994, indeed Ric “took it upon himself to resurrect this ancient knowledge”, despite Merlin’s alleged “comeback visit in a vision”.

Skepticism is a very, very good thing

In essense, this was a piece about checking out a strange and somewhat new (at least for our time) modality of healing. As hinted in the piece, I'm also rather skeptical about VortexHealing's history, wording, etc, but the one thing I can say is I felt amazing afterward and it seemed to have really worked. And to be honest, my healing path has always involved opening up my rational mind to things I never thought possible. A few years ago, I thought acupuncture, reiki, and homeopathy was for a bunch of quacks - that is until those modaliites actually worked.

other reasons to be skeptical

I worked for one of the Vortex teachers for a while, several months, in her home. She did healing sessions over the phone - that is, they (the client & the teacher) would talk about 15 minutes or so, then they would hang up while she "worked" on them, and then there would be another phone conversation after that. However, it wasn't uncommon for her to work with me during that interim between the 2 calls, regarding the work/project I was doing for her, so it's not clear to me what she could really be doing for the client during that same time.

 

It seemed like the placebo affect - the client believed, and so got benefit. And a placebo is not a bad thing (I'm actually impressed by this evidence of the power of our minds...). Why not get benefit from something relatively harmless, rather than going the pharmaceutical route with sometimes unpleasant side effects? I do homeopathic formulas sometimes, and I don't know if it's the placebo effect or not, nor do I care. For me the question about any healing methodology is: does it work? If it does, you may not care either.

I really don't like the wording, but...

I've experienced it many times and Vortexhealing has a very strong effects on many levels. I hate it when people start talking about Merlins and lineage and all that fancy talk.

I like the simple explanation (as much as you can explain energetic healing) and i don't mind experiencing something new and feel for myself (my sensing abilities are advanced enough to be my guide, and i can tell the difference between a strong energetic session and a "nudge" that just makes your emotions stir). anyways, I'm not going to advise anyone by myself, but i recommend having a look at this website http://www.expandingreality.org/?page=vortexhealing This guy has a thorough The-way-I-like-it explanation about Vortexhealing and Energetic healing, without the weird mumbo jumbo.