Enchanted Empath

Charlene Murphy

remember your inner brilliance

  1. JAN 25

    The War on Intuition and Empathy: How 1984 Isn’t Just Fiction Anymore

    We are living in a moment that George Orwell once warned about, a world where truth becomes negotiable and empathy is increasingly framed as weakness. In 1984, Orwell did not simply imagine a government that controlled information. He described a system that trained people to distrust their own senses, silence their moral instincts, and surrender their inner authority to external power. Only when individuals abandoned their capacity for independent thought and emotional truth did tyranny become effortless to maintain. Orwell’s warning was never just about politics. It was about the slow, calculated erosion of human intuition, empathy, and critical thinking. In Oceania, citizens were conditioned to reject their own lived experience in favor of official narratives. They were taught to trust the state over their own eyes and conscience, and to view compassion as a threat to social order rather than its foundation. Emotional authenticity was replaced with ideological obedience. Moral discernment was traded for compliance. The Party’s greatest victory was not surveillance or censorship, but psychological conditioning. People learned to doubt what they felt, suppress what they knew, and accept contradictions without resistance. Over time, they stopped asking whether something was true and focused only on whether it was approved. That dystopian dynamic is no longer confined to fiction. It is unfolding around us. Long before I ever taught spiritual practice or intuitive development, I was a high school English teacher. Books like 1984 weren’t just part of a curriculum to me, they lived in my psyche. I watched teenagers wrestle with Orwell’s ideas about power, truth, and psychological control, and I watched some of them begin to recognize those patterns in the real world. Even then, it was clear that the novel wasn’t primarily about politics. It was about consciousness. It was about what happens when human beings lose trust in their inner voice. Looking back now, I see how deeply that work shaped me. It laid the foundation for everything I do today. Teaching literature was my first doorway into teaching discernment, intuition, and emotional awareness. My work as a spiritual guide did not replace that path, it grew directly from it. The same questions remain at the center: How do we stay awake? How do we stay human? How do we protect our inner truth in a world that constantly pressures us to abandon it? Across the United States, we are witnessing a cultural environment that increasingly rewards conformity over conscience and reaction over reflection. Short-form video and algorithm-driven media train us to crave instant stimulation rather than sustained thought. Attention spans shrink, nuance disappears, and complex ideas are flattened into memes and outrage clips. We are being conditioned to react emotionally while thinking less and less critically. At the same time, public education struggles under political pressure, underfunding, and systems that prioritize standardized testing over genuine inquiry. Many students graduate without the tools to question narratives, evaluate evidence, or empathize across difference. Political tribalism fills the void. Instead of asking whether something is right, many people ask only whether it aligns with their “side.” Loyalty becomes more important than integrity. Discernment becomes dangerous. People become stupid. Perhaps most disturbing is the growing rhetoric, including from some self-described religious nationalists, that empathy is a weakness. Compassion is framed as softness. Care for the vulnerable is portrayed as naïve. Yet this directly contradicts the teachings they claim to follow. Christ’s life was built on radical compassion for the poor, the stranger, the sick, and the marginalized. To reject empathy while claiming spiritual authority is not strength. It is moral confusion and straight-up gaslighting. These patterns are no longer abstract. They appear in our headlines and in our communities. Federal immigration enforcement actions have led to fatal shootings involving U.S. citizens. Children have been detained alongside their parents and transported far from home. Families have been shattered under the language of “law and order.” Each incident is framed as necessary, procedural, or justified. Over time, repeated exposure dulls public outrage. What once would have shocked the conscience becomes another passing story. This is exactly the psychological terrain Orwell warned about. In 1984, citizens were trained not merely to obey, but to stop trusting their own emotional responses. They were taught to feel what they were told to feel and ignore what their conscience whispered. When people lose confidence in their inner moral compass, they become dependent on external authority for meaning, truth, and permission. The call to “question everything” echoes across spiritual and philosophical traditions, from the Buddha to Socrates to Jefferson. It is not about rebellion for its own sake. It is about refusing to outsource your conscience. It is about asking who benefits from a narrative, who is being erased, what we are being encouraged not to notice, and whether something aligns with our values or merely our fears. Independent thought is inconvenient to systems built on control, which is why it is always targeted first. This war on intuition does not stop at politics. It permeates our culture. Scroll through social media and you will see endless rows of women with the same filtered faces, the same sculpted features, the same artificial perfection. Individuality is replaced with templates. Uniqueness is edited out. We are trained to distrust our natural bodies, rhythms, instincts, and inner knowing in favor of manufactured ideals and external validation. When people no longer know who they are, they become easier to manipulate. The truth is that the United States is not well. A nation where children can be detained, citizens can be killed with no accountability, empathy is mocked, education is weakened, and truth is partisan is a nation in spiritual crisis. We are increasingly governed by fear, spectacle, and short-term power. Many people sense that no one is coming to save us, and that realization can feel overwhelming. But that truth is also liberating. There is no hero riding in on a white horse. No perfect leader. No institution that will suddenly fix this. If we wait for rescue, we will wait forever. The responsibility and the power still rests with us. We remain co-creators of our lives. We still choose what we consume, what we believe, what we tolerate, and what we build. Systems thrive when people feel powerless. When they feel defeated. When they believe their choices do not matter. That sense of helplessness is not accidental. It is the goal. Resistance does not always look like protest. Sometimes it looks like clarity. It looks like choosing depth over distraction, integrity over approval, and alignment over autopilot. It looks like getting honest with ourselves about what fuels us, what drains us, and what we are ready to outgrow. This is not spiritual bypassing. It is spiritual responsibility. We cannot control every system, but we can control our relationship to them. We can decide not to become numb, not to become cruel, and not to become small. This is why intuitive and intentional living matters more now than ever. Manifestation is not about pretending everything is fine. It is about refusing to surrender your creative power to chaos. It is about consciously designing your next chapter instead of letting fear write it for you. In uncertain times, it is easy to shrink, lower expectations, and abandon dreams. But survival is not the same as living. You are here to create, grow, evolve, and contribute something meaningful. That requires intention. My upcoming Intuitive Manifesting class is not about “positive vibes only.” It is about grounded, conscious creation in a world that profits from your disempowerment. It focuses on reconnecting with your inner guidance, clearing emotional and energetic blocks, reclaiming your creative authority, and designing a life that reflects who you truly are, not who you were trained to be. In a culture built on control and conformity, creating an intentional life is one of the highest forms of rebellion. The gentle invitation is that you are welcome if you feel called. You belong. You will be supported. The harder truth is that if you do not intentionally shape your life, someone else will do it for you. Corporations, algorithms, political narratives, and fear-based messaging are already trying. This work is no longer a luxury. It is a form of self-defense. Orwell did not write 1984 to scare us into silence. He wrote it to remind us that tyranny succeeds when people abandon their inner authority. Empathy is not weakness. Intuition is not naïve. Independent thought is not dangerous. They are our last lines of defense. Take back your power. Intend. Manifest. Design a life that aligns with your truth. The future is not written yet, and you are still one of its authors. Remember your inner brilliance… and stay woke.

    13 min
  2. 11/14/2025

    The Perfect Storm: Why I Left the US

    I didn’t plan to leave the United States when I did. I grew to love my home, my spiritual community, my clients, and the life I had built. But over time, it felt like I was standing in the middle of a storm that wouldn’t end. Everywhere I turned, something was falling apart — the economy, healthcare, politics, the environment, and my relationships with my children. As an empath, I could feel it all. The collective anxiety. The grief. The anger simmering beneath the surface of daily life. What had once felt familiar began to feel unbearable. And then came the moment I knew I couldn’t stay. When the Soul Says, “It’s Time to Go” It didn’t happen overnight. It was a slow unraveling — the kind that starts as a whisper and becomes a roar. Each year, another layer of peace seemed to peel away. The cost of living climbed higher, the sense of safety lower. Every conversation seemed to circle back to fear — fear of losing jobs, homes, freedoms, or even our lives. The pressure to keep up, stay strong, and “be grateful” grew louder, even as the joy drained away. For me, it became spiritual. My soul kept saying, “This isn’t freedom anymore.” I started questioning everything I had accepted as normal — working three side hustles while trying to grow my business, skyrocketing rent, healthcare, political chaos, and the ever-present undercurrent of division and violence. It was as if the entire system was designed to keep people exhausted and disconnected from themselves. And that’s when I realized: It wasn’t just about leaving a country — it was about leaving a mindset I was raised in. It was about creating something different. “None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free.” Johann wolfgang von goethe The Perfect Storm The decision to move abroad wasn’t one single event. It was a series of awakenings that stacked like waves until they became a storm I couldn’t ignore. It was watching the political divide grow so wide that compassion became a casualty. It was seeing gun violence take lives faster than we could process, and realizing it had somehow become normal. It was working harder for less, and feeling my body rebel against a pace that didn’t feel human. It was watching my son relapse and pretend it wasn’t happening, a heartbreak that changed everything. Each of these became part of the perfect storm—not a tragedy, but a reckoning, a spiritual invitation to choose life, peace, and sanity over familiarity and fear. Listening to the Call When I finally saw things as they were, not as I wished them to be, everything shifted. Allowing myself to imagine life beyond the U.S. wasn’t about escaping. It was about telling the truth. And in that truth, I found a strange kind of peace. Accepting what I couldn’t change and choosing to change what I could became the first real act of freedom. The idea of living slower, freer, and more connected to nature and community was about remembering who I am when I’m not constantly in survival mode, and when facing the truth is no longer treated as an inconvenience. So I followed the whisper. I packed my bags, said goodbye, and began the journey of becoming an expat — not because I had it all figured out, but because my spirit couldn’t stand the madness any longer. What’s Next This is the first episode in a series I’m calling “Why I Left the U.S. — The Perfect Storm.” Over the next few weeks, I’ll share what led me to this decision: the politics, the fear, the broken systems, the heartache, and the longing for something more. Each episode will explore one piece of the puzzle, from gun violence to healthcare, from racial division to the spiritual exhaustion that comes when empathy hurts too much to carry. If you’ve ever felt that quiet ache that says, “There has to be more to life than this,” you’re not alone. This series is for you. Freedom isn’t a luxury for the few — it’s our birthright, even if sometimes we have to fight to claim it. Affirmation I am free to follow the voice of my soul. I trust that peace is not a place — it’s a way of being.

    11 min
  3. 10/01/2025

    How to Channel Messages from Your Spirit Guides and Ancestors

    Have you ever felt a comforting presence in an empty room or heard a whisper of guidance when you needed it most? These moments may be your spirit guides or loved ones who have passed, reaching out to support you. In today’s Psychic Game, we’ll explore how to channel messages from these unseen helpers. It’s simpler than you might think and can bring clarity, comfort, and connection to your life. What Does It Mean to Channel? Channeling is the act of opening yourself up to receive information from the spiritual realm. It’s like tuning your inner radio to the right frequency. Spirit guides often come through as wise mentors, offering insights and encouragement, while loved ones may bring messages of love, reassurance, or even a little humor. How to Prepare Yourself for Channeling Before you dive in, it’s important to set the stage. Think of it like inviting a guest into your home—you want the space to feel welcoming and clear. Create a Quiet Space Find a spot where you won’t be interrupted. Light a candle or some incense, and keep the lighting soft. Ground Yourself Take a few deep breaths and visualize roots growing from your feet into the earth. This keeps you balanced while connecting to higher energies. Set an Intention Be clear about why you’re channeling. For example, say: “I invite only the highest and most loving energies to communicate with me.” Techniques for Channeling Messages Automatic Writing Grab a notebook and a pen. Close your eyes, take a deep breath, and ask your guides or loved ones to share what you need to know. Then, start writing whatever comes to mind—don’t censor yourself. You might be surprised at the clarity that emerges. Meditative Listening Sit quietly and focus on your breath. Ask a question mentally, such as: “What do I need to know about…?” Wait and listen for impressions, words, or images. Sometimes, the answers will feel like your own thoughts, but trust the process—intuition often feels subtle. Write your impressions in a journal. Use a Psychic Tools Using Tarot cards is by far my favorite way to connect with anybody’s energy – near or far, living or not. Pull a Tarot card while asking your guides for insight or signs from a loved one—it’s amazing how spot-on the messages can be! The Tarot speaks straight to your intuition. You can also use a pendulum or your favorite Oracle deck. Speak Out Loud Try asking questions out loud, then pause and “feel” for the answer. It might come as a thought, an image, or even a physical sensation. I recommend writing those feelings and thoughts down to capture them before they’re gone… kind of like a dream. Want a simple, step-by-step guide to automatic writing? Grab my Automatic Writing Workbook and start channeling with ease. How to Know If It’s Real Many people wonder if they’re just imagining things. Here’s the deal: authentic messages often feel uplifting, insightful, and sometimes even unexpected. They’re not about fear or negativity; they’re about growth and love. It’s okay if you don’t know specifically who you’re connecting with as long it’s a positive experience. I often call my guides “you guys” and I don’t get caught up in identifying them. Instead, I’m grateful for their presence and guidance. Same with relatives. Sometimes I can’t tell who it is right away, but I keep going and tell them “I’m not sure who you are yet, but I can feel your love and warmth. Show me something that is unique to you.” If not right away, I’ll get a message or insight as to who reached out and I’ll thank them. I always recommend journaling your impressions after each session to create a personal reference library. This not only helps you track patterns and insights but also validates your intuitive progress over time. You’ll start to know who you’re connecting with based on the personality, words, or images you receive. How do you most commonly receive messages? Everyone is unique. Assess your intuitive style and level of receptivity by taking a QUIZ. Common Signs of Connection A warm or tingling sensation when you’re channeling. I typically feel tingling around my ears, head, and neck. Receiving answers or clarity in surprising ways. Stay open to signs and synchronicities. Feeling calm, supported, or reassured after the experience. Channeling certain people, I feel warm hugs, while channeling certain guides, I feel uplifted and inspired. A Simple Exercise to Try Today Here’s a quick exercise to connect with your spirit guide or loved one: Sit comfortably with your eyes closed. Take three deep breaths and say, “I am ready to receive a message.” Ask a specific question, like: “What can I focus on to improve my relationship with…?” for person guidance. Wait for the first thought, image, or feeling that comes to mind. Write it down. Ask questions like: “Were you at my wedding? Did I see you there?” for personal connection. You may not get a full sentence right away—sometimes it’s just a word or a symbol—but with practice, the messages will become clearer and clearer. Trust the Process Channeling is like building a relationship; the more you practice, the easier it becomes. Whether you’re connecting with a loving guide or a cherished relative, remember to approach the experience with gratitude and an open heart. The more open your heart, the clearer the connection. Avoid overthinking, as it can create blocks and interrupt the flow of messages. If your channeling session gets hijacked by your logical brain, it’s time to stop. Pick it up again another time. Believe me when I say, we are channeling all the time. Next time you have an insight or impression, ask yourself where it came from. You may begin to notice that not all your thoughts are your own or originate in your mind. When you take the time to write these insights, hits, and impressions in a journal, it becomes abundantly clear that many of your thoughts and feelings are intuitively channeled messages. Keeping this record helps you see patterns and strengthens your trust in the process… see why journaling is a big deal when developing your intuitive gifts? For extra support in your channeling adventure, check out my 21 Must-Have Tools to Help You Channel Spirit post that highlights the best tools for channeling. There is no magic in the tools. You are the magic, but they sure do help you get in the proper headspace and energy for channeling smoothly. Have you ever received a message from your spirit guides or loved ones? Perhaps in a dream? Share your experience in the comments—I’d love to hear about it! Happy channeling! 🌟

    14 min

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remember your inner brilliance