Aboriginal

Secrets of Aborigine Healing & Awakening with Robbie Holz

Host: Alan SteinfeldGuest: Robbie Holz, author of The Secrets of Aboriginal Healing and Aboriginal Secrets of Awakening

Alan Steinfeld introduces Robbie Holz, author of two books on Aboriginal healing practices and spiritual awakening, after spending time with the Australian Aboriginal community.

After receiving a terminal diagnosis from his doctors, Gary met an Australian naturopath who informed him about the Aboriginal people’s healing abilities.

Through this connection, Gary arranged to meet an Aboriginal healer, Ry, in Brisbane, who had been anticipating his arrival.

Gary traveled to a remote Aboriginal village where healers worked with him, using spiritual alignment practices focused on healing the body, mind, and spirit.

Robbie explains that Aboriginal healing emphasizes alignment of body, mind, and spirit, recognizing that illness often has emotional roots.

Aboriginal healers teach patients to confront and release these emotions as part of the healing process, enabling the body to heal naturally.

Robbie, inspired to survive for her young son, ultimately turned to holistic approaches, including techniques from Aboriginal healing, which helped her fully recover from hepatitis C and fibromyalgia.

Robbie outlines the core principles of Aboriginal healing:

Connection to a Higher Source: Aboriginal healers often speak of aligning with the “Big Guy,” a term for the Divine, to aid in healing.

Robbie describes the Aboriginal concept of “Dreamtime,” which she defines as a state of connection to higher consciousness, a realm the Aboriginal people consider more real than the physical world.

Aboriginal children are taught to enter Dreamtime frequently, which strengthens their spiritual awareness and connection to the natural world.

The Aboriginal perspective views nature as an interconnected, living entity, with communication occurring telepathically among plants, animals, and humans.

According to Robbie, Aboriginal people believe that speaking out loud diminishes this connection.

She recounts a ceremony she attended with Aboriginal women, where they collectively raised their vibration to induce rainstorms—a powerful display of harmony with nature.

Aboriginal culture is marked by a lack of individualistic possessiveness, competition, or ego-driven actions.

Instead, Aboriginal communities emphasize cooperation, respect, and balance in relationships and responsibilities.

Robbie shares how Aboriginal practices of humility and service promote societal balance, contrasting with Western values centered on personal achievement.

Robbie explains that healing is foundational to the Aboriginal worldview but is ultimately part of a broader goal—awakening.

Aboriginal culture is grounded in high states of consciousness, where individuals live in alignment with spiritual truth and natural law.

Robbie emphasizes that Aboriginal practices encourage people to return to a more balanced way of life, reconnecting with the Earth and nurturing a peaceful, love-centered existence.

In closing, Robbie expresses her gratitude for Aboriginal wisdom, suggesting that modern society can benefit greatly from these ancient insights, not only to heal but to evolve spiritually.

Michael Harrell Interviews Robbie Holz: Secrets of Aboriginal Healing

Robbie Holz is the author of Secrets of Aboriginal Healing and Aboriginal Secrets of Awakening, both of which incorporate Australian Aboriginal healing principles.

Robbie Holz has engaged in healing ceremonies with Aboriginal healers in the Australian Outback, and she remains dedicated to helping people activate their inner healer.

Secrets of Aboriginal Healing, written by Robbie’s late husband Gary Holz, captures the core beliefs of a 60,000-year-old Aboriginal healing system.

Central to Aboriginal healing is the understanding that thought plays a role in health and disease.

Robbie’s personal healing team includes Divine Mother Mary, Archangels Raphael and Michael, her late husband Gary, and Aboriginal healers.

Aboriginal healers, for instance, can sense messages from natural surroundings, a skill that modern society has largely forgotten but can regain by asking for guidance and remaining open to it.

Her books, Secrets of Aboriginal Healing and Aboriginal Secrets of Awakening, are available for purchase and offer additional insights into her healing philosophy.

In this interview, Michael Harrell and Robbie Holz discuss the impact of Aboriginal healing practices on physical and emotional well-being.

HEALER EXPLAINS How to Access Ancient Techniques for Awakening Higher Dimensions

Guy mentions the role of Robbie's book, The Secrets of Aboriginal Healing, in his workshops, encouraging listeners to explore it for further understanding.

Driven by a desire to stay with his children, Gary’s search led him to a serendipitous encounter with a woman in a jazz bar who introduced him to the healing practices of Aboriginal tribes in Australia.

Gary subsequently traveled to the Outback, seeking the wisdom of Aboriginal healers to assist with his health challenges.

His experience with the remote Aboriginal community significantly altered his understanding of healing and spirituality.

Robbie shares core Aboriginal principles, including the understanding that emotions play a fundamental role in both the creation and healing of illness.

Aboriginal healers believe that individuals must recognize, process, and release negative emotions to sustain health.

The Aboriginal approach advocates for feeling and then releasing emotional states, preventing them from becoming lodged in the body.

Through her own healing journey, which relied on both physical and mental practices, she applied principles learned from Aboriginal teachings and her spiritual team, eventually achieving recovery.

Mark Isaak

Flood Stories from Around the World

"Noah's Ark Revisited: On the Myth-Land Connection in Traditional Australian Aboriginal Thought", in Dundes.

What Are The World’s Oldest Stories?

The landscape and mythology of Australia hold significant importance to Aboriginal cultures.

Coastal Aboriginal groups have legends that recount a time when the coastline was further back and describe a great flood that caused permanent changes, submerging parts of the land.

Aboriginal Australians and Native American tribes also have variations of this story.

The longevity of some stories, such as those in Aboriginal Australian cultures, suggests a unique capacity for preserving history across tens of thousands of years.

Viviane Chauvet

Ancestral Lineages & Ancient Memories Restored

She highlights her experiences at Uluru and Kata Tjuta, key sites for the Aboriginal people, known for their deep spiritual and ancestral significance.

The Aboriginal tribes, who hold over 60,000 years of continuous cultural heritage, gather annually at Uluru, seen as the spiritual center of their land.

Ignatius Donnelly

The Kings of Atlantis become the Gods of the Greeks

397): "My notion would be that the sun, moon, and stars, earth, and heaven, which are still the gods of many barbarians, were the only gods known to the aboriginal Hellenes.

Ignatius Donnelly

The Question of Complexion

("Natural and Aboriginal History of Tennessee," p.

Ignatius Donnelly

Corroborating Circumstances

The fact is indisputable, and is eminently noteworthy, that while the affinities of the Basque roots have never been conclusively elucidated, there has never been any doubt that this isolated language, preserving its identity in a western corner of Europe, between two mighty kingdoms, resembles, in its grammatical structure, the aboriginal languages of the vast opposite continent (America), and those alone." ("Families of Speech," p.

W. Scott-Elliot

The Story of Atlantis

According to Farrar, "there never has been any doubt that this isolated language, preserving its identity in a western corner of Europe, between two mighty kingdoms, resembles in its structure the aboriginal languages of the vast opposite continent (America) and those alone" (Families of Speech, p.

Although the first settlement in that country was not in the strict sense of the term a colony, it was from the Toltec race that was subsequently drawn the first great body of emigrants intended to mix with and dominate the aboriginal people.

Ignatius Donnelly

The Aryan and Japhetic Colonies

I have shown in the chapter in relation to Peru that all the languages of the Hamites, Semites, and Japhethites are varieties of one aboriginal speech. The centre of the Aryan migrations (according to popular opinion) within the Historical Period was Armenia.

Australia - 40,000 years ago

Wilgie Mia – Ancient ochre mine

Wilgie Mia is the largest and deepest historical Aboriginal ochre mine in Australia.

In Wajarri Aboriginal people’s tradition, Wilgie Mia was created by an ancestral being, Marlu, the red kangaroo.

Between the 1940s and 1970s, Aboriginal miners were temporarily displaced by miners of European descent.

Aboriginal miners also continue to extract ochre for use in ceremonies, art, and healing practices.

Pleiades and Orion
Our History

Why much of Ancient American history is lost

1982: Canada recognizes Aboriginal rights in its Constitution.

Channeling

Lemuria, Australia, and Aboriginal People

Aboriginal People:

The Aboriginal people are described as star people, strongly connected to the stars.

The Aboriginal people are considered the original humans, with their genetics being foundational for other human developments.

The conversation suggests that various star races mixed their DNA with Aboriginal genetics to create the current Earth humans.

Aboriginal people are described as truly Gaia beings, indigenous to Earth, unlike other humanoid races that originated from Lyra and other star systems.

The Aboriginal people are depicted as the embodiment of Earth’s essence, coexisting with the planet in harmony.

This summary captures the themes of past life experiences, the connection between ancient civilizations, genetic mixing by star races, and the unique role of Aboriginal people in the spiritual and genetic history of Earth.

Pleiadians

The Pleiadian Influence

The Pleiades feature prominently in the Dreamtime mythology of Aboriginal Australians.

These stories are integral to the cultural and spiritual practices of Aboriginal people, symbolizing the connection between the land and the sky.

From the Greeks and the Aboriginal Australians to the Native Americans, Japanese, Hindus, Chinese, Norse, and Polynesians, the Pleiades have been a source of inspiration, guiding agricultural practices, marking seasonal changes, and symbolizing various spiritual and mythological themes.

Cycles
Australian Aboriginal

Seven sisters

The Pleiades constellation figures in the Dreamings and songlines of Aboriginal Australian peoples, usually referred to as the seven sisters.

Ignatius Donnelly

The Colonies of Atlantis

The Formorians, considered aboriginal by some historians, possessed advanced naval capabilities and civilization.

Ignatius Donnelly

The Pyramid, the cross and the Garden of Eden

Apart from any distinctions of social or intellectual superiority, of caste, color, nationality, or location in either hemisphere, it appears to have been the aboriginal possession of every people in antiquity--the elastic girdle, so to say, which embraced the most widely separated heathen communities--the most significant token of a universal brotherhood, to which all the families of mankind were severally and irresistibly drawn, and by which their common descent was emphatically expressed, or by means of which each and all preserved, amid every vicissitude of fortune, a knowledge of the primeval happiness and dignity of their species.

Guatemala

The Annals of the CakchiQuels

There are various reasons for believing that the native population was denser at the Conquest than at present; and now the total aboriginal population of the State of Guatemala, of pure or nearly pure blood, is about half a million souls.

Chinese

Pangu Creation Story

Obviously the name means "aboriginal abyss," or in the terser German, Urgrund, and we have reason to believe it to be a translation of the Babylonian Tiamat, "the Deep."

Creation Stories

The Dreamtime (Australian Aboriginal Mythology) Describes a timeless time of creation when ancestral spirits formed the landscape, laws, and cultural practices.

Bats

Australian Aboriginal Mythology: Bats feature in some Aboriginal myths, like the story of the bat who stole the night, explaining why bats are active at night.

Australian Aboriginal mythology is as rich and diverse as the many different Aboriginal cultures across the Australian continent.

Bats feature in several Aboriginal myths and stories, often with unique and culturally significant roles.

A common theme in some Aboriginal stories is the relationship between the bat and the moon.

While not directly about bats, this famous Aboriginal story from Southeastern Australia demonstrates the interconnectedness of all creatures.

Aboriginal stories involving bats often carry moral lessons or social teachings.

Australian Aboriginal mythology, with its rich tapestry of stories and characters, including those about bats, provides a deep insight into the ways Indigenous Australians understand and relate to the natural world.

Frank Ontario

The Great Separation

The spoken languages, reminiscent of Aboriginal and Māori tongues, consisted of simple, actionable verbs and phrases, primarily used for everyday functions and singing.

16,000 - 10,500 BC

 Last Glacial Maximum

https://theconversation.com/ancient-aboriginal-stories-preserve-history-of-a-rise-in-sea-level-36010

Several decades ago, linguists working with Aboriginal groups along the Queensland coastal margin recorded stories about a time when the ancestors of these people lived at the coast “where the Great Barrier Reef now stands”.