Every human being is caught in the invisible, powerful current of evolution and expanding consciousness, yet we rarely possess the map to see where it is taking us. In 1989, my life changed forever when I began transcribing a profound body of wisdom from a universal intelligence known as Wilhelm — information that I hid for decades while I lived it, tested it, and used it to navigate my own healing. What emerged over thirty-seven years of quiet, meticulous recording is a brilliant, consistent architecture of our universe. It is a new way of looking at existence that demonstrates exactly how generational, astronomical shifts impact our emotional, mental, and spiritual well-being, proving that there is an ultimate order to our lives and a precise path toward realizing our true worth.
Before the Turn
The stigma of being different started before I could even speak. As an infant, something appeared on my skin that doctors couldn’t explain — a rash no one could diagnose. For a while, the working theory was that I was allergic to my own mother, which meant I couldn’t be held the way a newborn needs to be held. It was the first of many times in my life that something true about me would be misread as something wrong with me.
Childhood didn’t make it easier. I came down with nearly every illness available to a child at the time — this was before many of today’s vaccines existed — one after another. And then, at school, a teacher noticed I wasn’t watching the board. I stared off into space for long stretches, seemingly somewhere else entirely. The explanation everyone reached for was vision. My parents took me to get glasses I never actually needed, because nobody had the language yet for what was actually happening: a mind that worked differently, that left the room mentally long before anyone understood why.
I wouldn’t get the real answer for almost seventy years. The “daydreaming,” the inability to settle into what was in front of me — what looked like a problem to every adult around me — was ADHD, diagnosed when I was 70 years old. For nearly seven decades, I carried a story about myself that wasn’t true: that something was simply wrong with me. It would take Wilhelm, and decades of doing the work this philosophy demands, to finally rewrite that story into something closer to the truth — that I wasn’t broken. I was simply built differently, and nobody around me yet had the map to see it.
A Childhood Built for This
Wilhelm has pointed out something about my own history that I didn’t recognize as significant until much later: the particular path my early life took through different communities seems to have prepared me, specifically, to receive this body of work.
I grew up in a neighborhood that was mostly Black — that was simply the world I knew as a young child. Then, before high school, I transferred to a school that was mainly white and Jewish, a completely different culture, language, and rhythm of daily life. By high school, I moved again, back into a mostly Black environment, though more mixed than where I’d started. Each move was its own culture shock. But somewhere in all that shifting, I discovered I could adapt to each of these worlds rather than simply surviving them. I learned to see the real differences between races, cultures, and economic realities — not from a textbook, but from having lived inside more than one of them before I was even old enough to drive.
Wilhelm has suggested that everyone carries a version of this in their own history, if they’re willing to trace it back. We are each shaped by the particular collisions of culture and circumstance we were born into, and those collisions are rarely accidental. Mine, it turns out, mirrors exactly the kind of shift the world is moving through right now — a generational unwinding of boundaries that once felt fixed. Several of Wilhelm’s messages speak directly to this: that each of us carries generational patterns that were always meant to break, and that the people best equipped to help break them are often the ones whose lives were quietly built, piece by piece, to hold more than one world at once.
The Moment That Frightened Me
I didn’t go looking for this. In 1988, I read an article in a business magazine about a man who’d started a new company and credited his success to a kind of guidance he was receiving — something he wrote down, almost like automatic writing. I’d been meditating since 1986, but nothing like what he described had ever happened to me. Still, something about his story stayed with me, and I decided to try it myself.
For several days, nothing happened. I sat. I waited. I felt foolish.
Then, one day, it felt like something took over my hand. The information simply began moving through me — not from me. I remember the fear more than anything else. I asked, out loud, “Is this you speaking to me?” And the answer I received was that this was another part of me, a higher self. That explanation should have been comforting. Instead, it unsettled me even more. I didn’t want to call it “myself.” I wanted — needed — to call it something else, anything else.
So I said the name Wilhelm. I had no idea why. I’d never planned the name, never chosen it the way you’d name a character or a company. It simply arrived, the way the writing itself had arrived. It would take years — decades, really — before I understood why that name, and that connection, had surfaced the way it did.
Wilhelm has said, often, that the thing we fear most is usually our own gift. That was true for me in the most literal sense possible. The fear I felt in 1989, the moment my hand started moving on its own, wasn’t fear of something foreign invading my life. It was fear of something that belonged to me, surfacing for the first time. I spent decades half-hiding from the very thing that would eventually become the work of my life.
What I’ve come to believe since is this: the fear I felt wasn’t a sign that something was wrong. It was a sign that something was real. And the connection I stumbled into in 1989 isn’t unique to me. Everyone has access to something like it — most people simply never sit still long enough, or get frightened enough by the silence, to find out.
The Private Years: Living It Before Teaching It
For nearly two decades after 1989, almost no one knew this was happening. I kept working as a vocal coach — that was my visible life, the one people saw. But underneath it, every day, I was receiving these messages and doing something most people never get the chance to do: testing a body of wisdom against my own life in real time, with no audience and no stakes beyond whether it actually worked.
I didn’t accept any of it on faith. When a message told me to look at something I’d been avoiding, I looked. When it told me a difficulty I was facing held information I was refusing to receive, I went back into that difficulty instead of around it. Years before “own every aspect of your story” became a sentence I could write in an article, I was living the slow, often uncomfortable practice of it — failing at it regularly, returning to it, failing less.
By 2008, I had enough of an archive — and enough confidence that this wasn’t a phase or a coping mechanism but something durable — that I created a public home for it: anyadvicefortoday.com. I didn’t launch it with fanfare. I simply began posting the daily messages, dated, verbatim, the way they’d always come through. I had no plan yet for a program, a book, or a public identity built around it. I just knew the archive needed somewhere to live outside of my own private files, in case it mattered to anyone besides me.
It would be another thirteen years before I built anything resembling a structured teaching from it.
January 11, 2012: The Message That Became the Foundation
Of the thousands of messages I’ve received since 1989, one in particular has stayed with me as the clearest articulation of everything Wilhelm has been pointing toward all along:
“Your story is unique and valuable. It is unique because no other soul shares precisely your story. It holds the utmost value for you. Your story is comprised of everything your past holds; including all that has occurred for you, happened to you, everything you have done, every person you have met, and every word you have spoken. All of it has been and always will be perfect.
Your only ‘job’ then is to seek to know the perfection of your story. Any aspect of your particular story that you attempt to ignore, dismiss, or judge, will cause you to experience some difficulty because you are refusing to receive the information and wisdom that your story holds.”
— Wilhelm, January 11, 2012
I didn’t fully grasp its weight the day it arrived. It was only over years of returning to it — testing it against my own life, watching what happened when I judged a piece of my story versus when I simply let it be perfect as it was — that I understood this single message contained the entire architecture in miniature.
I want to be clear: I have never studied numerology or astrology. Wilhelm has never required that I do. But years after this message arrived, I learned that January 11th is recognized in numerology as a date some practitioners associate with new beginnings and a kind of spiritual threshold. I was even told that totaling the digits of the date in one common method arrives at the number 8 — a number numerologists describe as the shape of infinity itself, a symbol of completion that continues rather than ends. I didn’t know any of that when the message came through. I didn’t need to know it. That, to me, is part of the point: the architecture was there whether or not I had the language or training to name it. Evolution doesn’t wait for us to have studied it first.
This is why Wilhelm returns to that message again and again. It isn’t a singular insight tucked among thousands of others — it’s the core tenet underneath everything else this work has ever said.
Every human being moves through the same fundamental terrain: challenges, difficulties, wins, losses. None of us are exempt. But this philosophy insists on something more demanding than simply living through those experiences — it insists that we own every aspect of them. Not selectively. Not just the parts that flatter us or confirm what we already believe about ourselves.
When we refuse that ownership — when we ignore, dismiss, or judge pieces of our own story, exactly as the message warns — we don’t just create personal difficulty. We forfeit the autonomy and self-mastery this work is built to cultivate. And that forfeiture isn’t only personal. Multiply it across enough individuals, and you have a species that keeps repeating its own evolution in place rather than moving through it. That’s the stake Wilhelm has pointed to from the beginning: this isn’t only about individual healing, although it is certainly that. It’s about whether enough of us can build real self-mastery quickly enough to meet a moment of massive generational change — astrological, cultural, collective — with something more than reaction.
Overcoming Fear: The Book I Barely Let Anyone Find
Even after 2008, when I finally let the daily messages exist publicly, I still wasn’t ready to talk about where they came from. I published because other people had been asking me to — not because I’d decided to step into this fully. I don’t think I even understood yet the scope of what I was holding.
By 2018, something had shifted enough in me that I knew I needed to start explaining myself, at least a little. I couldn’t keep living a life where my fears and difficulties kept dissolving in ways I had no ordinary way to account for. So I did what felt like the safest version of speaking up: I wrote a book. With a friend’s help, I put together Overcoming Fear: A Guide to Freedom. In it, I wrote honestly about the very thing that had kept me from writing it in the first place — fear itself. I knew fear was the thing holding most people back, because it had held me back for years. And I knew the information I’d been receiving was too valuable to keep entirely to myself.
That should have been the turning point. It wasn’t, not really. I barely promoted the book after it came out. A mentor of mine pointed out, more than once, that people would actually want to know about this work — and that I was the one standing in the way of them finding it. He was right. I couldn’t yet explain, in any language that would sound reasonable to most people, that I was receiving organized, coherent guidance from a source I couldn’t fully name or prove. So instead of risking the judgment I assumed would follow, I let the book sit quietly, mostly unread, mostly unmentioned — another decade’s worth of resistance, dressed up as a finished project.
2020: The Word “Restructuring”
In 2020, the world went through what most people experienced as a pandemic. I understood early on that it was something more than that. That year, for the first time in over thirty years of receiving these messages, Wilhelm began using a word that had never appeared before: restructuring.
I didn’t know what to do with that word. It made me uncomfortable in a way few messages ever had. During many of the 2020 transmissions, I found myself sitting for long stretches before I could bring myself to write down what I was hearing. And Wilhelm noticed — the messages themselves began pointing out my own hesitation, naming the fact that I was doubting what was coming through. I wasn’t only resisting the writing. I could feel, underneath the discomfort, that something genuinely difficult was coming — some kind of upheaval most of us weren’t yet equipped to understand. Wilhelm grew more insistent that this information needed to come forward, and that I needed to be the one speaking it. I resisted anyway. We all do, even when we can hear ourselves clearly. Resistance eventually becomes its own kind of unbearable, and that’s when something finally has to give.
For me, that breaking point came in 2021. I had been given, by then, the full shape of the philosophy — including its specific name. But thirty years of self-doubt doesn’t dissolve on its own, so I went looking for outside confirmation, something I had never done before: two separate Akashic records readings. The first gave me some reassurance. The second confirmed everything — and did something I hadn’t expected. The reader, independently, used the word “operating” in describing what she was sensing, the same word embedded in the philosophy’s actual name.
I broke into tears when I heard it. Not sadness, exactly. Something closer to regret — regret for all the years I hadn’t trusted what I already knew to be true — mixed with a relief I can still feel describing it now. I’d finally received the outside confirmation I didn’t think I needed but apparently did. I think that’s true for most of us. We want to believe ourselves. Often, that’s the hardest and longest leg of the entire journey.
The Jump to Live Channeling
Around this same time, something else was changing that I hadn’t expected: I could no longer write the messages longhand the way I had every single day for over thirty years. The longhand process itself, which had been so consistent for so long, simply stopped working. Wilhelm was direct about it — I needed to let go of that method and make another jump. But the jump being asked of me wasn’t a small one. It was live channeling, speaking the information in real time rather than transcribing it in private, and I didn’t trust myself to do it.
I remember the exact moment I finally tried. I was sitting on the edge of my bed, and I heard the words clearly: you must start speaking, because we have too much to say. I was still resisting. My body felt almost frozen — a kind of physical inertia I couldn’t immediately move through. And then, somehow, I began.
What happened next surprised me as much as the channeling itself. Once I started speaking live, information began coming through that I had no prior memory of holding — specifically, references to an ancient memory from Egypt. At the time, this meant nothing to me. I had no context for it, no reason to believe it, and no way to explain it. It also happened to confirm, almost word for word, something the Akashic records reading had already told me.
I’ve since come to understand this not as something unique to me, but as something available to all of us. Wilhelm has been clear that we each carry these kinds of ancient memories, because consciousness itself has always continued, never beginning or ending the way a single lifetime does. The only way any of us actually shift or change, Wilhelm points out, is through consciousness — and consciousness, by its nature, moves and evolves across far more time than a single life can hold.
December 2021: Your Last Development Program
The live channeling sessions kept returning to the same message: it was time to take the next step, to actually put this work into other people’s hands rather than simply continuing to receive it myself. In December 2021, I finally did.
Wilhelm guided which thirty-one lessons — I call them assignments — would go into the program, and I didn’t understand at the time why those specific ones, in that specific order, would work. I simply trusted the guidance and built it as instructed.
What happened next is still, to me, one of the most surprising parts of this entire experience. Every single person who went through the program made dramatic breakthroughs. Not some people. Not most. Every one. I was floored by it — floored enough that I actually stopped and questioned whether I could trust what I was seeing, because it didn’t seem possible that thirty-one assignments, channeled without any conventional explanation for why they’d work, could produce that kind of consistent result.
Wilhelm’s explanation was simple: this is how evolution happens. Not gradually, in small increments we barely notice, but in jumps — sudden leaps in what individuals and entire civilizations become capable of thinking and accomplishing. Wilhelm was pointing to something larger than one program or one group of participants. This was being offered as another mechanism for raising human understanding, one person at a time, with consequences that reach far beyond any single individual’s life — toward a higher state of understanding for the planet itself.
Becoming Willing to Be Seen
There’s a line from the actor Jim Carrey that has stayed with me: the problem with most people is that they don’t actually want to be seen. That was unmistakably true of me. I had kept this work hidden, in one form or another, for over three decades.
But I knew, eventually, that I had to go bigger than the quiet archive and the barely-promoted book. So I started reaching out to podcasters — small, deliberate steps toward visibility. The first was Kevin Moore. It took me a long time to work up to even that single interview. Once I’d done it, I told myself I needed to go further. That led me to Alex Ferrari, whose channel was growing quickly at the time, and the response brought a level of attention I’d genuinely never experienced before.
And then, true to the pattern Wilhelm had pointed out in me for years, I sabotaged it. I didn’t own what had just happened. I let it pass without fully claiming it, the way many of us do when something valuable shows up that we never expected to find — or never believed we deserved to find. What followed was regret, and then the slower work of regrouping and beginning again. That cycle, more than almost anything else, is the essence of so much of what Wilhelm teaches: we are never finished completing who we’re capable of becoming.
Years ago, someone wrote a song about me and called me “the alchemist,” because they could see I had a way of transforming things — situations, people’s understanding of themselves, my own difficulties — into something else entirely. I didn’t accept that word at the time. It felt like too much to claim. Just before recording the interview that became part of today’s article, I pulled a tarot card on my computer, almost as an afterthought. It was the Alchemist. The same word I had run from for years, arriving again, unprompted, at the exact moment I was finally about to own it out loud. I don’t think that was an accident. I think it’s simply what happens once you stop resisting what’s already true about you.
Beyond Belief
Right after the Alex Ferrari interview, Gaia reached out to me from Colorado — entirely unexpected. The first booking was for George Noory’s show, Beyond Belief, and the title felt almost too perfectly chosen. What had come through me over decades, working with Wilhelm, genuinely was beyond anything I had a framework to believe before it happened to me. It felt like exactly the right place to start speaking publicly about it.
Shortly after, I was scheduled for a channeling conference alongside a number of other channelers — another new world for me, and an intimidating one, since I had never moved in those circles before. At the conference, something happened that mirrored what I’d already seen happen with my own clients: I did birthday messages for every single participant, and they were accurate. Not occasionally. Every one. What made this especially striking to me was that many of these people were channelers I’d admired for years — people I assumed already had more access to this kind of information than I did. Realizing that what was coming through me was, in some way, aiding even them was disorienting in the best sense.
What we discovered, collectively, was simpler than any of us expected: we are all capable of this. Most of us simply don’t know it yet.
There’s a story Wilhelm has returned to many times in our private sessions, about a runner named Roger Bannister. Before 1954, it was considered physically impossible for a human being to run a mile in under four minutes. Scientists believed the human body simply couldn’t do it. Then Bannister did it. And almost immediately afterward, other runners started breaking the same barrier — not because their bodies had suddenly changed, but because they now believed it was possible. One person’s breakthrough didn’t just change his own life; it shattered a collective limitation for everyone who came after him. That is the ripple effect, and it’s the same mechanism behind everything Wilhelm has asked me to do: break through my own limitation first, publicly enough that others can see it’s possible, so they can do the same in their own lives.
Coast to Coast AM: Part of the Journey, Not the Destination
I’d heard of Coast to Coast AM before, but I didn’t really understand its scope until my brothers and nephews told me how popular it was, and how long they’d been listening to it themselves. That convinced me it would be the right place to bring this information forward, so when the opportunity came up, I took it without much hesitation.
The first appearance went well, though something about it felt slightly disjointed. You’re on the phone, unable to see anyone, interacting in a completely different way than an in-person conversation allows. Still, I believed the information itself held value regardless of the format. I went on the show a few more times after that, on December 29, 2025, among them.
In hindsight, Coast to Coast wasn’t the thing that catapulted this work forward, and I don’t think it was ever going to be. People listening tend to be moving quickly, gathering pieces of information rather than settling into any one of them. It wasn’t quite the right audience for what Wilhelm was offering.
But I’ve come to see that as exactly the point. It was simply one more step in a longer unfolding — one that made me more comfortable being exposed publicly, more willing to keep going. I think that’s true of anyone carrying a gift they’re meant to eventually offer the world: there’s an unfolding that happens individually, in stages, long before it ever becomes something collective.
The Acceleration and the Pattern
What followed moved faster than I could keep pace with. More kept being revealed, almost faster than I could process it — and I’ve come to understand that this acceleration isn’t unique to me. As we evolve, as we move toward higher states of consciousness, each of us gains access to a deeper understanding of our own unique life journey. Wilhelm has always wanted every person to know that this access exists, not just a select few.
This is part of what makes the present moment so important. I was guided to look at the messages both forward and backward across the archive, and in doing so, I began to see a continual cycle — something Wilhelm has been demonstrating through me for thirty-seven years, meant to be understood by all of us, not held as a private discovery.
There’s a pattern to how we come to understand our own functioning over time. We didn’t have neuroscience, or cognitive behavioral training, or even language for neurodiversity decades ago — frameworks many of us, myself included, needed long before they existed. This is simply how evolution unfolds: new understanding arrives when enough people develop new ways of seeing, thinking, and being.
But there’s a harder truth sitting alongside that one. When we look back at nearly any difficulty in human history, we often tell ourselves we never saw it coming. In most cases, that isn’t quite true. We saw it. We simply didn’t trust ourselves enough to believe what we saw. Moving through that doubt and resistance — individually and collectively — is itself part of how evolution happens.
What I came to realize is that the “step by step” was never a separate technique Wilhelm handed down — it was the daily practice itself. Showing up every single day for thirty-seven years, writing what came through, testing it against my own life. That repetition, that daily willingness, is how change actually happens — not just for me, but for each person, and for the world we share. It depends on how many of us become conscious enough to start making choices that serve both ourselves and the greater good.
What’s harder to accept is that we are an integral part of that process right now, in this moment, not just observers of some larger unfolding happening elsewhere. I struggled with it as much as anyone. Like so many people, I had real difficulty accepting that I could be one of the ones meant to bring something forward.
Wilhelm’s answer to that resistance was always the same question, asked plainly: who else would it be? Who else would change your life, or bring something new into the world, if not you? It is always us. It only requires that we become willing.
June 20, 2026: Today’s Confirmation
As if to confirm everything in this article, today’s message arrived:
“We have given you everything you need to succeed. We mean you, the individual, and your world collectively.
Throughout the eons, you have come to discover the processes of evolution, and our messenger volunteered for his role, as you did.
The only reason any of you would be experiencing struggle, fear, anger, or a lack of any sort is due to your unwillingness to accept your valuable role.
Today, more of you will take that step as we asked our messenger to do. You will not be able to use your logical human mind to figure out how our messenger and we did this, because he didn’t know either, as the gift you possess might have gone unnoticed by you until now.
Now is when you wanted your uniqueness to shine.”
— Wilhelm, June 20, 2026
This message arrives every year on or near the Summer Solstice — the longest day of the year, the moment the sun reaches its highest point before turning back. Eighteen years of June 20 messages, read together, trace a single unbroken thread: you already have what you need; the only thing standing between you and your life is your willingness to accept it. Today’s message doesn’t introduce that idea. It activates it.
What I’ve come to understand, sitting with all of this, is that none of it was ever separate for me alone. It’s not separate for anyone. We each figure it out in different ways, at different times, in different places — but the thing being figured out is the same thing. My particular way happened to be Wilhelm. Yours will be something else. That difference is not a flaw in the design. It is the design.
June 21, 2026: The Solstice Itself
Tomorrow’s message arrived early, as Wilhelm has often done before a Solstice:
“We have given you the secret to life. It may take a while for you to accept that, as it was for our messenger. But you and he will understand and accept more today after you review the trajectory of your individual and collective restructuring. You won’t miss it today.
Don’t miss the recording at the end.”
— Wilhelm, June 21, 2026
What makes this remarkable isn’t only that it confirms the very title of this article. It’s that Wilhelm said almost the identical thing two years ago, on June 21, 2024:
“The secret to life. That is what we have provided, and today is the best day to share it with more of you. You will be able to hear yourself and us today.”
— Wilhelm, June 21, 2024
And one year after that, on June 21, 2025, Wilhelm pointed forward to this exact moment, naming me specifically:
“You might hear us today. As you examine your lives and world, the information we provided last year and years prior will cause more of you to take the next step on our evolutionary journey, including our messenger.
Regret will not serve you, but taking action will. You were never meant to suffer or give your power to others, but become the empowered person you intended, which occurs in your consciousness.”
— Wilhelm, June 21, 2025
I didn’t write today’s title and then go looking for messages to support it. The title was already there, waiting, since 2024. I simply hadn’t been ready to claim it yet.
Reading the full eighteen-year arc of June 21 messages together, a second thread runs underneath the “secret to life” itself: the dismantling of the idea of failure. In 2012, Wilhelm said failure doesn’t exist — that it’s only a name we give to outcomes before we’ve lived long enough to see what they actually produced. In 2023, that same message was revisited directly: “You have never failed… reread 2012.” The years in between — 2013 through 2022 — trace one continuous argument for why: that what you desire to become matters more than knowing how it will unfold, that nothing in your life is accidental, that conflict and restructuring are the fertile ground for the self you’re becoming, not evidence that something has gone wrong.
That is the architecture Wilhelm has spoken of — not a metaphor, but a literal, traceable structure running underneath nearly two decades of dated, verbatim messages. I didn’t design it. I only wrote it down, one day at a time, for thirty-seven years, until enough days had passed that the shape of it became impossible to keep denying.
The Recording I Had Forgotten
Tonight, while preparing this very article, I went back to my own archive — anyadvicefortoday.com — to find the June 21, 2024 message I’d referenced. I’d forgotten there was a recording attached to it. I hadn’t looked. I hadn’t remembered. That is simply how this has always worked for me: I receive it, I write it down, and often I don’t fully retain it myself until I go back and find it again, sometimes years later, the way anyone else might.
The archive page from that day is its own small piece of evidence. Alongside the new June 21, 2024 message — “The secret to life. That is what we have provided, and today is the best day to share it with more of you” — I had also reposted the June 21, 2022 message in full, the one about restructuring, choice, and planting “the seeds of the self you want to become.” Underneath both messages sat two video links: the live conversation from 2022, and a new video recorded that same week in 2024.
The first of those 2024 videos, The Truth About Your Self-Imposed Struggle (June 20, 2024), was a ten-minute channeling — Wilhelm speaking directly about this work finally coming through me. A second video, Life’s Ultimate Secret Unveiled, premiered the next day, June 21, 2024 — the Solstice itself — and carried the title that would eventually become this article’s own.
In the longer recording, Wilhelm said plainly: “We have given you the secret to life. It just takes a while for you to understand it.” The recording goes on to describe something I genuinely didn’t know how to hold at the time: that I had, by then, written down somewhere close to 12,000 pages since 1989 — a number that, hearing it back, startled me as much as it might startle you. Wilhelm put it this way: “He’s sat down every single day and just received information from us… but also what he’s experienced and has proven to all of you that you could do so much more.”
There’s a line from that recording I still think about. Members of the program had heard me say, in real time, discovering the scope of what I’d built: “Wow, I knew that others in history have created things like this, but I just didn’t know it would be me.” That sentence is, in many ways, the entire emotional center of this 37-year story. Not disbelief that such a thing could exist — but disbelief that I could be the one holding it.
The recording also explains something practical that’s been true throughout 2025 and into this year: Wilhelm specifically asked me to limit new students entering the work to ten people at a time, even while saying that what was coming could eventually reach millions. I understood that instruction as protective — both of the integrity of the material and of my own ability to stay grounded while something this large kept expanding faster than I could always keep pace with.
And there’s one more thing in that recording worth saying plainly, because it surprised me too: Wilhelm has said that as people begin truly embodying their authentic selves — moving through judgment, self-hatred, old patterns — something shifts even physically. People around me have told me, more than once, that I look younger than I did years ago. Wilhelm’s explanation was simple: when you stop spending your energy maintaining old self-judgment, that energy goes somewhere else. It goes into you.
We’ve waited for you your entire life. We love you so much.
That’s how the 2024 recording ends. I’m only now able to play it back for you, two years later, on the day it finally makes complete sense.
The Secret to Life
After thirty-seven years, here is what I can finally say plainly: the secret to life is to become yourself. Your authentic self — not a fixed destination you arrive at once and stop, but something that keeps unfolding for as long as you’re alive. That unfolding will look different for every single person, because no two of us are unfolding into the same thing. That difference is exactly what can make the process uncomfortable, even frightening, before it becomes empowering.
I know this because I lived almost my entire life inside that discomfort. I now understand that this, too, was purposeful. My role was never to skip the doubt — it was to move through all of it myself, the same doubt and disbelief any person might feel encountering this work for the first time, so that what came out the other side could actually be trusted and used.
I am 75 years old. Whatever difficulties or challenges you are moving through right now, I was given the information to address them — for myself and for anyone willing to receive it. Not everyone will believe this. I didn’t believe it either, not fully, not for a very long time. That is simply part of being human: we spend years searching for the thing that finally lets us say, this is who I am, and I believe in myself. For me, that took until this year, until 75, until thirty-seven years of quiet, daily work could finally be named for what it actually is — the most extensive personal development and self-actualization framework ever assembled, built one verbatim message at a time.
The only real difficulty any of us faces is the failure to become fully ourselves — and that failure is no longer something I can accept as inevitable, for you or for me. The path has been given. What happens next is simply a matter of willingness.
This article is the beginning of that telling, not the whole of it. There is more of this story still to be documented — more of the 37 years, more of what Wilhelm has shown me, more of what’s coming. I’ll be building this out in the days ahead. For now, I wanted you to have this much: the announcement, and the invitation to begin.
Please share this with as many people as you possibly can. You will be making a great difference in their life, and in yours.
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