Debra Cummings

This is another post about an inspiring person, and in this case, it is Debra Cummings. I’m currently enrolled in her program called “Manifestation Mastery”. In the program we work (well, that’s exactly the wrong word) on manifesting our big dreams. To put it a different way, we don’t work at all on our dreams; instead, we identify our dreams, get out of our own way, and allow those dreams to come into being. (I don’t believe this course is open to the public at this time, so I won’t go into detail about it.)

I know Debra through other work she did in one of her past lives (so to speak). Several years ago, we both lived in the same county and attended the same workshops. She was my teacher, indirectly, reading and providing feedback on work I submitted for a certification program. Later, I was excited to hear that she embarked on her own solo journey as an energy practitioner and manifestation teacher.

Debra’s work is constantly evolving into something new and different each time she offers something to her students/workshop participants. I especially enjoy learning from her because she uses her own experiences as an example of how she learned what she teaches. She’s been through many hard times, as most of us have, but she’s had some miraculous experiences and unbelievable breakthroughs along the way. When teaching, she describes experimenting with different ways of working through problems or finding the best way to move from Point A to Point B. Then, when she finds the best way, she tells us about the experience so we can re-create it for ourselves.

I love attending her workshops and gatherings because there is a small group feel to it (much like I had with Louise Taylor, as described in a previous post). Deb often has time to connect with you one-on-one and you can get your questions answered. Her workshops are casual, fun and low stress.

Debra is also an artist, and works her energy practitioner skills into her creations. She creates unique inspirational art pieces with titles such as “Success”, “Miracles”, “Serenity” and “Gratitude”. Then she embeds the artwork with the positive energy of that word/trait/characteristic (e.g. success) 111 times. The energized art is available in prints, scarves, tote bags, etc. on her website at Inner Vision Art.

Deb is a huge animal lover. Check out her website with cute animal photos and other offerings here. You can also connect to Debra through her Facebook group, Soul Notes.

The Grey School of Wizardry

I’m enrolled here, and am going to start this post by clarifying that the Grey School of Wizardry is a REAL SCHOOL. It is an online school (they’re working on a program to allow students to attend live on campus at Highspire) that teaches several subjects in the esoteric arts. Yes, it was partially inspired by Harry Potter’s Hogwarts and is like that in various ways (and they do allow people under 18 to enroll), but they do teach real magic(k).

The Grey School of Wizardry (GSW) was founded by Oberon Zell in 2004, so they’re (we’re) celebrating the 20th anniversary this year. Oberon Zell-Ravenheart was the founder and, until 2022, the Headmaster of GSW. Adeptus Oberon Zell is a fascinating person, and he’s still active in the school. He collaborated with several authors and magical practitioners to write the Grimoire for the Apprentice Wizard and Companion for the Apprentice Wizard. Both books are highly rated and used as texts at GSW.

I absolutely love this award-winning mini-documentary on Adeptus Oberon Zell (the Wizard OZ).

GSW has over 500 classes spanning across sixteen departments of study, including Wizardry, Healing, Psychic Arts, Wortcunning, Divination, Alchemy, Ceremonial Magicks, and Dark Arts (also known as “DADA”, or Defense Against the Dark Arts). If you enroll as an Apprentice, you select your major (e.g. one of the sixteen departments of study) and a minor (if desired) after you complete your first year. Your first year doesn’t necessarily take 12 months to complete. You can complete your Year 1 studies in less time if you commit to it, or you can take longer (like me). I’ve been enrolled for a few years and am just now completing my first year studies.

As mentioned above, GSW is mostly an online school, but there are other ways to attend. Beginning in 2026, GSW will offer a Boarding program for interested Apprentices. They’ve been working on this program for quite a while, and they regularly provide updates (with photos showing progress on building, etc.) on their Discord server and in various GSW meetings. In addition, there is a virtual GSW campus in Second Life.

We had fun this evening on our GSW campus in Second Life! I represented my Lodge by participating in a Berserker tournament. There’s a lot in those two sentences, so let me break it down: Second Life is a virtual environment where you (as an avatar) can walk around and interact with others. GSW has a virtual campus in Second Life, so you can actually attend some classes live in on GSW’s campus and in GSW’s virtual classroom. GSW Apprentices in Second Life must wear the school uniform and abide by GSW rules (reasonable things like no bullying). (Note: everyone at GSW has a title. There are Apprentices, Prefects, Deans, a Headmaster, etc.) GSW’s virtual campus is accessible to GSW staff and enrolled Apprentices only (and Magisters, which is a different thing). Grounds on the campus are beautiful with virtual lodges, a store, and other buildings. I’ve actually only been on campus a few times in the past few days while getting ready for the Berserker tournament.

Here’s my Second Life avatar in my GSW uniform. I’m in the Stones Lodge (Circle of the Standing Stones), and our Lodge color is green, so we wear green ties.

Back to the Berserker tournament! Berserker is a strategy-based video game for (one or) two players that’s available in only in Second Life as far as I know. I can only find one video that explains and demonstrates it:

I believe our Headmaster bought this game for us to play on campus at GSW, and staff decided it would be fun to set up a tournament with the four Lodges competing against each other.

So tonight we played the first round of the tournament. We played on a GIANT BOARD on tournament grounds in front of a crowd. The Headmaster was in attendance and called the games while we played. Our Lodge had two players and our opponents from the Waters Lodge had two players. My teammate played one of the players from the Waters Lodge first. I snapped this photo from my laptop while I sat in the (virtual) bleachers while he played. (Note: I’ve removed names for privacy; however, we do use magickal names at GSW.)

You can see my teammate on the podium on the left. The Headmaster is directly across from me, sitting in a chair and narrating the action (although this photo was taken before the first game started). The Berserker board is like a giant chess board, and the pieces are way bigger than life-sized for the tournament. The guy in the black GSW uniform is a fellow Apprentice who came to watch the tournament. Others watched the livestream of the games in Discord. (The various arrows you see on my screen are controls that move your head or the camera angle.)

The photo below shows my teammate and myself on the podium after the game. Unfortunately we lost to the Waters Lodge. We were subsequently eliminated (or, as the Headmaster referred to it, we were “voted off the island”). The Waters Lodge will go on to play the winner of the next match, and those two teams will play in the championship. I believe the winning team wins merits for their Lodge and tuition for one year at GSW.

Anyway, it was super fun and I’m hoping we do much better next year. Not that anyone asked, but, in my defense, I only had one day to actually practice!

Here’s the link to the Grey School of Wizardry. You can reach out if you have questions.

Louise Taylor

I want to dedicate this post to Louise Taylor, a woman who had a huge influence on me.

To explain how I came across her, I have to start at the beginning, when I first became interested in the healing arts. Early on, I started checking out books from the library on dreams, reincarnation and similar topics. I found a book on self-hypnosis and started practicing and experimenting with it and found that it was something that came easily to me. The book suggested that you make a recording of the hypnotic induction (in other words, record yourself playing the hypnotherapist role), and then play the recording back while in a relaxed state so you can hypnotize yourself and plant suggestions. I found the idea of recording myself to be somewhat annoying since my pacing/timing as “hypnotherapist” were skills that weren’t really honed at that point, and I didn’t like the sound of my own voice. It was easier to just memorize the script and go from there, and once I used that method I did find that self-hypnosis worked for my purposes.

Another book I found at the library was Richard Gordon’s book Your Healing Hands: The Polarity Experience. I loved that book and the idea of polarity therapy so much, it changed everything for me. It was life-changing when I actually got to practice polarity therapy on people because I could feel the energy, and the person I was working on could feel me working with it, moving it around, and getting it to flow. It helped me learn to sense energy, move energy and start to figure out how to interact with practice clients.

Around this time I started meeting and befriending people who were psychic to one degree or another, so my own abilities were enhanced by my connection to each of those people and the work I was doing. One of my friends bought me a small crystal bunny that somehow became a hilarious thing to both of us. She knew I kept the crystal bunny in my pocket when I left the house, and on my nightstand when I slept, so she would use the crystal bunny as a GPS of sorts: a way to locate me whenever she wanted to send me thoughts or contact me (this was before cell phones). Another friend could (and would) regularly wake me up from sleep.

The sometimes hilarious Crystal Bunny

There was a small metaphysical bookstore called “Akashic” on the main street that ran through the city where I lived. They sold books, candles, Tarot cards and crystals (I think the crystal bunny was procured there). I remember when I was there once Barbara Brennan’s book Hands of Light practically fell off the shelf when I walked by it. I looked through it, bought it, and it had a huge influence on me.

When I was in Akashic, I saw a flyer for holistic healing classes. See, back before the internet, you had to market by making paper flyers and putting them in bookstores where your target audience may shop. Bookstores within driving distance of your classes, because this was before Zoom. Anyway, the flyer advertised a series of classes held at a different bookstore in Van Nuys, CA.

That’s where I met Louise Taylor, who taught the classes. I have no idea why this amazing woman was teaching holistic healing in the back of a bookstore in Van Nuys, but I chalk it up to the fact that she was probably an outcast because she was way ahead of her time.

I wish I still had the flyer so I could list the classes exactly as she described them, but I don’t think I have it anymore. I do, however, still have my notes (somewhere). When I find them, I will update this post. But for now I have to rely on memory.

We met in small groups of probably ten people (or fewer). Louise would give us some super old, hard to read Xerox copies of things that were probably very fringe and occult at the time. You know, things like Kirlian photography and a healer’s affect on a cell. But she really knew her stuff and she walked her talk.

One of the classes was on something called magnetic therapy. NOT the magnetic therapy with actual magnets; magnetic therapy where you use your hands as magnets. You use your right (or dominant) hand as the ‘+’ (positive) hand, and you “send” or “push” healing energy with it while it is on the client’s body. You use your left (or non-dominant) hand as the ‘-’ (negative) hand and you “receive” or “pull” energy with it while it is on the client’s body. (Interesting notes: I ended up going to Barbara Brennan’s school sometime around the year 2000, and we learned this exact exercise, just with different terms and a few additional techniques, such as “stop”. Also, I ran into one of the women in Louise’s class at a Barbara Brennan workshop in Santa Fe, New Mexico many years later.) Louise demonstrated the techniques and then had us pair up and practice on each other. She clearly explained that, as we pushed and pulled another person’s energy, we needed to send any excess energy out through our elbows to avoid picking anything up from the client. Magnetic therapy is mostly used for pain relief, such as headaches and sore muscles, if I recall correctly. While this technique probably seems outdated, I’m sure it is still very effective.

During class one week, Louise distributed the ancient-looking Xerox copies that were taken from Richard Gordon’s polarity therapy book. The topic for that week was polarity therapy, so I was pretty excited since polarity therapy is my jam. Each week Louise would pick someone from the group and use them as the practice client for demonstration purposes, and I was the practice client for polarity week. She had me remove my shoes and lie down on a massage table while she talked about what she was doing, which involved sending currents of energy through certain energy pathways in the body. While she was talking, I started drifting away a little bit, not really able to hear what she was saying. I glanced down to see what she was doing and, to my total surprise, she was using only one finger to make contact with my pinky toe. There were surges of energy flowing through me, up from my toe, through my leg and torso, up to my head, and back down the other side. It was so powerful, but not overwhelming. It was amazing and inspiring. It was clear to me that the group didn’t know this was happening at all. They didn’t know she was sending energy and she didn’t know how powerfully I was experiencing it. I wondered if she saw potential in me, and was showing me that I could do the same thing, but she was showing me in a very private (but still public) way. It was an amazing one-on-one moment with her, and it still inspires me when I think about it. The group proceeded to do the polarity techniques the “normal” way, with both hands placed on the practice client’s body. After we practiced, Louise took us back to the bookstore’s bathroom to show us how to properly wash our hands, ground ourselves and clear excess energy from our hands and arms using the water faucet and certain hand movements. Those techniques are used to remove any energy picked up from the client, and I still use them to this day.

The private moment I had with her was not the only thing she shared in that covert way. There were other things she shared, for example by having them sitting out in the room or on a table or mantel, but she never pointed them out or spoke about them. There was one thing in particular that I saw (it was a book), that she never mentioned. But later I found the book at Akashic so I could see what it was all about, and it became another major influence on my life. In retrospect, I understand that she was never trying to push anything on anyone, but gave people the opportunity to notice something, investigate it for themselves if interested, and have their own experience of it.

Louise gave additional classes on the topics of Therapeutic Touch, candle magick, acupressure, chakras (using Barbara Brennan’s Hands of Light book), and light and color therapy.

Separately from the classes, she made her own recording of a couple of color therapy mediations and offered the tapes for sale. In the recording, she walks you through visualizations of the colors associated with each chakra in combination with images of crystals/gemstones to help you clear and charge each energy center. I bought a copy from her and still have the tape.

I Googled Louise a few years ago and believe she has passed on to her next great adventure. Additional creative Googling helped me stumble upon a book she wrote called Simple Ways to Wellness. It’s a workbook that describes different self-help healing techniques for various ailments. In the book, Louise shows you how to use acupressure, visualization, color therapy and affirmations for each affliction.

The variety of techniques I learned (or enhanced) from my time with Louise really inspired me to take up healing as a serious hobby, and eventually as a subject of lifelong learning. I’m so grateful to have met such a talented and inspiring individual. If anyone who reads this ever knew her or learned from her, please reach out. I’d love to hear your stories about her.