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Deborah King has led a pretty wild life: she's seen men levitate, she's peeled potatoes, she's overcome cancer, and she's fallen ten feet into a remote ravine and had to be airlifted out.
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Spiritual Master Deborah King On Trauma & Rising Above ItAll What's it like to meet a phenomenon? This spiritual master whose work is described as "electrifying" by W magazine takes us through her journey of hard- won success as a young lawyer, through her battles with cancer, to her ascension to one of the world's top meditation and energyexperts. Deborah King has led a pretty wild life: she's seen men levitate, she's peeled potatoes, she's overcome cancer, and she's fallen ten feet into a remote ravine and had to be airliftedout. Going into the interview I was unsure if we could make a true connection — for my part, I can say I had no idea how interesting she was, nor could I have guessed how many times she would startle a laugh out ofme. The sun was setting when I caught up with her and, since she wakes before the sun rises, she had already worked 14 hours that day. Her home office looked like a spiritual enclave of some guru in Thailand, or maybe Bali: jeweled blue tiles on the wall, bright orange orchids sitting on her left, and some statued god or goddess planted on herright. As one of the world's leading expert energy healersand meditation teachers, Deborah King has traveled to practically every country on all of the habitable continents to learn from the best. Her favorite teachers, though, the "most life- changing ones," were all fromAsia.
For Debbie King, her experiences in spiritual learning toe the line between the sublime and the ridiculous — "I saw my teacher levitate. I mean, I saw some pretty wild stuff,yeah." "Oh?" I respond, my eyebrows raising, my mind turning to figure out the possible logistics of such an extraordinaryevent. "Yeah, he hovered, like a hovercraft!" The humorous and unexpected comparison plucks me out of my skepticism. "He just hovered." I'm charmed by her eccentricity and we both break, for the first time since the interview began, into real, unrestrained laughter. Her comment threw me out of balance but at the same time, it's impossible not to feel comfortable with her. Try preserving your awkward anxieties in the face of Deborah King: a woman who embraces her quirks (and others') with such grace and joy. When she opens up about her journey to the world ofenergy healingand meditation, she smiles her signature full-faced smile, hervoice upbeat as she says, "It's kind of a fun one, actually." It is — but not many people would introduce a story of trauma, cancer, and addiction thatway.
Cancer: A Catalyst For SpiritualAwakening Deborah King had been a "hard-charging young lawyer," just a year out of UC Davis, working for the Deputy Attorney General of California. And then, one day, she woke up with cancer. "I was 25 and I was like, 'Wait a minute! This is not part of my conquer-the-worldprogram!'" She had the sneaking suspicion that there could be emotional, trauma-based causes for her illness. But someone like Debra King needed clarity in order to change her life — and there's nothing that fogs up your clarity more than being an addict. So she removed the alcohol and pills from her life, and she unraveled the lie, the biggest lie she was telling herself, the one anchoring her to unwellness: that she had a happy childhood. "I told myself, 'I had an ideal childhood, I was so loved.' And by repressing all of that trauma, I just got sick. You can't take major life events and just stick'em
somewhere in your body and say, like Scarlett O'Hara, 'Well, I'll deal with it later.' You know Scarlett O'Hara,right?" Here my knowledge fails me — I knew the character but not the line, yet in a (misguided) attempt to preserve some dignity I answer, half-truthful, "Yes." A good lying expert, she clues in on my cluelessness anyways and graciously expands. "Her famous line is, 'I'll think about it tomorrow, I'll think aboutit tomorrow.' She said that to every horrible thing that happened to her until Rhett Butler left her altogether. That's what I was doing — I was pulling a Scarlett O'Hara, and I finally had to come to terms with the difficult childhood I had, and the sexual abuse that I didn't want to acknowledge, and the next thing I knew, I was healed."
The realization Debbie King had about these physical pains having an emotional basis opened her up to the possibility of healing through alternative means. She called her physicians, asked to postpone her surgery to remove the tumor, and they agreed to give her a fewmonths.
And through some byproduct of fate-driven intuition, she stumbled upon energy healing and meditation. In her third session, Debra King and her healer looked at each other, knowing that something remarkable hadhappened. She went back to the hospital later, only to find out she didn't need the surgery: she had experienced a spontaneousremission. She dove into energy healing practicesand meditation afterward. That didn't mean she didn't have her setbacks or that her flaws had disappeared. Her pride about a spiritual breakthrough once caused her teacher to send her to the kitchens for a year to peel potatoes — "Well, it's not always easy to be humble," she laughs andshrugs. "He really did save me, though — one more step toward pride and you can lose your spiritualprogress." For decades, she supported her passion for healing through her work in law. She'd "switch hats every other week, driving down from Northern California to Southern California to teach energy healing andmeditation."
How An Unexpected Fall Helps Us Rediscover Our Balance One of Deborah King's most important breakthroughs came in her tenth year. While she was driving down, she recognized this feeling she had, a "floating feeling" — the same feeling you get, in fact, frommeditation. This "permanent meditative state," as she calls it, makes you "feel wiser, less flappable, able to see a much broader picture... It's just like you floated up above everything, and you've got a birds-eye view of everything. You've still got the notice from the IRS, or the nasty letter from your brother-in-law or you get fired from your job, but nothing affects you anymore because your consciousness becomes just like that seer in India — it starts to hover above itall."
When you step back from your distorted lens of the world, you're able to truly enjoy the world as it is. “Cancer was a great impetus to that. You don’t hang around and waste time when you think you’re dying. It’s veryinspiring.” She laughs again, cheerfully, heartily, and for a moment it feels like she's inviting me to join in on this funny little secret ofhers. "You develop so much from your unpleasant experience that they can even become the best things that ever happened toyou.” Through her own healing journey and experiences with spiritual gurus, she had discovered the fast track to spiritual enlightenment. Debra King now teaches her Be A Modern Master course, a meditation course that helps people rapidly release their trauma and unlock their own innate spiritualgifts. "I’ve found that I can change the world and you, the student, by teaching you sutras and injecting you into that ancient practice... Whatever you’re meant to be, your very best, I’ll get you there. If you’re kicking and screaming, I’ll get you there. I guaranteeit." When I asked her what she would say if she could deliver one message to everyone in the world at the same time, she answered, "You are unique, you are the only person like you, and that you’re not just meant to be healthy and successful but also happy. And that’s one of my functions is to help you achieve that in this lifetime, and not just put thatoff.” She's helped thousands lead happy and healthy lives in her dedicated pursuit to helping people heal from past traumas and fulfill their spiritual potential, just like she once did forherself.
Right before our interview, one of the callers on Deborah’s live weekly Facebook video show came on camera to thank her for her teachings atMindvalley. Deborah King shared with that student that before her couse had started last summer, she had fallen ten feet into aravine. She had to be airlifted out, stay in the hospital for eight full weeks and in a bed for four months. She still remembers lying in the ravine, motionless, watching the paramedics come down inropes. “I was looking up at the sky and saying to the Source, 'I really don’t need another accident, honestly! What is this one for?'" — I can’t tell if the sound she makes is a laugh or a cry but she moves on — “But now I know. I put it together. I needed to bereset.” And it finally dawns on me that this is the quality that makes her a great teacher, this “permanent meditative state” she teaches her students in her course, Be A Modern Master: come trauma or tragedy, she always rediscovers her balance. That’s all any of us can do — try to lift our body up, up onto that board and surf, even as waves come at you, threatening to upend you. And once you’re up in that sweet spot, once you’re floating above it all, you’re able to appreciate the holistic beauty of theworld. Sure, if you lose your balance, you’ll crash — but oh, man, that sweet spot.
Life’s never free from struggle, Debbie King shares, but you’re able to ride and enjoy the process until you regain yourbalance. Written by CheyenneDiaz.