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Energy Healing Knowledge Base & Resources by HealerRiz
 

Healing Services > Knowledge Base

 

This Knowledge Base section by HealerRiz brings together ancient wisdom and lived experience to document how different traditions describe unseen aspects of life operating under Divine governance. Here you’ll find clear, practical explanations of Reiki, karmic debt, corrective measures, human perception, positive entities, negative entity concepts, black magic, jinn (djinn) and the evil eye - as they are understood, described and experienced across cultures and faiths.

The material presented here does not assert medical, psychological or diagnostic conclusions. It exists to explain language, concepts and frameworks found in scripture, anthropology and spiritual literature, and to provide contextual understanding for topics referenced elsewhere on this site.

Descriptions reflect traditional interpretations, historical accounts and client-reported experiences rather than statements of objective causation. Any applied assessment or corrective work referenced on this site is addressed separately through Diagnostic Intuitive Healing (DIH) and is always complementary in nature.

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This Knowledge Base section by HealerRiz brings together historical, cultural and spiritual perspectives used across traditions to describe unseen or non-material influences that people have referenced throughout history.

It presents commonly used language and conceptual frameworks associated with topics such as Reiki, karmic debt, corrective measures, human perception, positive and negative entities, black magic, jinn (djinn) and the evil eye, as they appear in religious texts, folklore and client narratives.

These subjects are documented across the Bible, Qur’an, Torah, Vedas and other sacred writings, as well as in anthropological and historical records. From Japanese Reiki traditions to Semitic references such as Shedin, and scriptural warnings about envy or unseen harm, many cultures have developed symbolic and spiritual explanations for experiences that fall outside conventional frameworks.

The Knowledge Base is designed to help readers understand how these concepts are described, how they are traditionally interpreted and how they are commonly discussed, rather than to assert a single explanatory model, as examined in From Manifestation to Mechanism.

This section also serves as a supporting resource for other areas of the site, offering background explanations for terms and ideas referenced in discussions of spiritual healing, protection and disturbance.

It exists to document how different traditions articulate similar themes, emphasizing shared symbolic language and ethical teachings rather than promoting a singular belief system or making diagnostic or medical claims.

To understand how remote energetic intervention works in detail, read The Remote Healing Master Guide.
 

Learn about Generational Trauma & Ancestral Curses Technical Whitepaper


Knowledge is Key to Worldly & Spiritual Success
 

 

Reiki

Reiki is a Japanese spiritual practice developed in the early 20th century that is commonly described as a method for promoting relaxation, balance and personal wellbeing. The term Reiki is derived from two Japanese words: Rei, often translated as universal or higher wisdom, and Ki, meaning life energy or vital force.

Historically, Reiki has been discussed as a practice in which a practitioner places hands lightly on or near the body, with the intention of supporting calm, clarity and internal balance. Descriptions of Reiki vary widely depending on cultural, spiritual and personal interpretation.

Across traditions, Reiki is often referenced alongside broader concepts of life force, breath, spirit or vital energy found in many cultures, including Qi in Chinese philosophy, Prana in Vedic traditions and Ruach in Hebrew scripture. These parallels reflect a shared human attempt to describe internal states of vitality and coherence rather than a single unified theory.

In contemporary usage, people may refer to Reiki when describing experiences of relaxation, emotional release or a subjective sense of energetic alignment. These descriptions reflect personal interpretation and lived experience rather than medical or scientific classification.

 

Within this Knowledge Base, Reiki is presented as a historical and cultural framework commonly referenced by clients and practitioners when discussing non-physical wellbeing, stress relief or spiritual support. It is included for contextual understanding and comparative insight rather than as a clinical or diagnostic system.

1.0 Reiki
2.0 Karmic Debt

​Karmic Debt

Karmic debt is a term commonly used across spiritual and philosophical traditions to describe the consequences that follow human action over time. In Islamic understanding, outcomes in life are governed by Divine will, justice and wisdom rather than an autonomous karmic mechanism. Other traditions describe this principle using different language, often emphasizing cause, consequence and moral responsibility. In this Knowledge Base, karmic debt is presented as a descriptive framework people use to interpret hardship, advantage or repeated life patterns - not as a fixed destiny, judgment or spiritual sentence.

 

Our soul is eternal; The good and bad we do in a lifetime governs what 'plane' our soul will return to in the afterlife. The choice to return to earth and repay karma, is what karmic debt is - a reference to the ideology of our past lives; so we can attain a higher level.

As human beings in this world, there are those that suffer more than others, there are those less fortunate than others and there are those who have more ailments throughout their lifetime, compared to others. This is just a way of life based on our predetermined choices before we entered this world. It is a vast subject and beneficial for all to understand. Educating ourselves is the key to success, in this world and the next.

 

Reaching towards a higher plane in the afterlife is much harder than it is in our world - in terms of time.

 

There are many kind of people on the earth and each chose a path prior to being born. This can mean that you chose to be born in a destructive area rather than the westernized world, in order to endure suffering to repay your souls debt. On the other hand, you could have been born into riches or become very wealthy at a young age. This could also be a process to see, what good you can do for the less fortunate.

 

The flipside however, is being born into a very harmful family where, drugs and violence reigns supreme. How we create our lives from there is also dependent on what plane we will reach; such that, you could become a killer or work your way to helping those that you once were.

 

Karmic debt has everything to do with your soul and the person you are today. Your body is only a vehicle of transport on earth.

 

Do what's right, be humble, offer kind words, be compassionate, help those that are in need, love those around you, because this lifetime, this earth, this world, is all about love.

 

There are ways of easing our karmic struggle. Praying always helps… Praising your Lord is key; But Remember, your soul will not be 'charged' with more than it can handle. However, as humans, we find that living this life can be very overwhelming because there are plenty of negative entities that surround us and make our lives a lot harder than we pledged with God. I call these Negative Entities: Bad Aura, Bad Energy, Evil Eye, Jinn, Ghosts, Astral Spirits, Voodoo, Black Magic, Various Hex's & Spells. Such things do exist at various levels and strengths (take important note) - like mankind - there are some very influential and powerful people, there are those that are extremely mean, send out bad vibes and those that we don't feel safe around or even uncomfortable.

 

This is where I can help those that seek ease and progression.

​3.0 Corrective Measures

​Corrective Measures

Corrective measures refer to the actions taken after a disturbance or imbalance has been identified. Across cultures and belief systems, people describe a range of practices intended to restore order when life feels disrupted by external or non-obvious factors. These descriptions vary widely in language, symbolism and interpretation.

Within the framework used on this site, corrective measures are understood as structural interventions, not ritual acts or belief-based practices. They are applied only after assessment and focus on disengaging influences or conditions that do not belong to the system being examined.

People often use terms such as cleansing, removal, protection or correction to describe these actions. In practice, these words reflect an attempt to explain a perceived return to stability, clarity or forward movement after a disruptive factor has been addressed.

This Knowledge Base presents corrective measures as descriptive language used by clients and traditions to explain resolution, not as guarantees, supernatural authority or symbolic acts. Outcomes are governed by Divine permission and lawful interaction, not personal power, invocation or intermediaries.

Remote corrective work, when performed, is structured, deliberate and limited to what is identified during diagnostic assessment. No assumptions are made, and no action is taken without confirmation of necessity.

4.0 Human Senses

A Little About You - Human Senses

Human experience is shaped through a combination of physical senses, internal awareness and perception. Sight, sound, smell, taste and touch allow us to navigate the visible world, while intuition and subconscious perception influence how we interpret situations, environments and people.

Many individuals describe an internal sense of knowing - often called gut instinct or intuition - that alerts them to discomfort, danger or misalignment before conscious reasoning catches up. Across cultures, this is understood as a natural perceptual function rather than a supernatural ability.

People often report heightened sensations during periods of stress or disruption, including unease in specific environments, sensitivity to atmosphere, difficulty resting, or a persistent sense that something is “off.” These experiences are commonly described using emotional, spiritual or energetic language depending on cultural background.

This Knowledge Base does not diagnose physical or psychological conditions. Instead, it documents the descriptive language people use when ordinary explanations feel insufficient. Experiences such as fear without cause, persistent tension, recurring disturbance in specific locations or unusual environmental reactions are reported across cultures and belief systems.

Animals are frequently mentioned in these accounts. Pets may react to changes in environment or human stress through behavior such as alertness, avoidance or fixation. These responses are interpreted differently depending on worldview and context.

Modern medicine addresses many measurable conditions effectively. However, some experiences remain difficult to categorize through clinical testing alone. When people encounter unexplained sensations or recurring patterns, they often seek alternative frameworks to describe what they are perceiving.

This section exists to explain how human senses and perception are commonly discussed in spiritual and cultural narratives - not to assert causes, assign diagnoses or replace professional care. Understanding how people describe their experiences provides context for why they seek further assessment or guidance.

5.0 Positive Entities

Positive Entities

Across cultures and spiritual traditions, people describe the presence of supportive or protective influences during periods of difficulty, danger or moral testing. These influences are referred to using different language - angels, guides, helpers or benevolent forces - depending on religious or philosophical background.

In Islamic theology, protection and assistance are understood as originating from Allah alone, sometimes expressed through angels who act only by Divine command. Other traditions describe similar concepts symbolically, emphasizing guidance, restraint or protection rather than independent spiritual actors.

In lived experience, people often report moments of unexpected clarity, restraint from harm, or assistance during hardship. These experiences are interpreted as signs of mercy, alignment or protection rather than proof of external entities acting autonomously.

This Knowledge Base documents how positive entities are commonly described in spiritual language, not as literal classifications or guarantees of protection. Interpretations vary widely and are shaped by belief, culture and personal understanding.

Importantly, positive influence is not viewed as a reward system nor as immunity from hardship. In most traditions, protection coexists with testing. Support appears within Divine governance and does not remove responsibility, discipline or moral accountability.

This section exists to explain how people conceptualize protection and benevolent influence when describing spiritual experience. It does not assert independent spiritual agents, promise safety or replace personal responsibility, prayer or professional support.

6.0 Negative Entity & Removal

Negative Entity & Removal

Across cultures, people describe experiences of fear, disturbance, stagnation or distress using language such as negative energy, entities, attachments, evil eye, jinn, spirits or dark influence. These terms are not uniform in meaning and reflect cultural, religious and personal frameworks rather than a single spiritual taxonomy.

In Islamic theology, all influence operates under Divine governance. No being, force or entity acts independently of Allah’s will. Other traditions describe similar experiences using symbolic or narrative language to explain disruption, fear or persistent hardship that lacks an obvious cause.

In practice, clients use the term negative entity to describe felt interference — recurring fear, pressure, intrusive sensations, environmental unease or persistent imbalance. This Knowledge Base documents how such experiences are commonly described, not how they are definitively caused.

The concept of removal is likewise understood differently across traditions. Some describe it as prayer, others as cleansing, correction, protection or restoration of balance. These descriptions reflect human attempts to articulate relief and stabilization rather than proof of literal beings being extracted or expelled.

This section exists to:

  • Explain common language clients use when describing distress

  • Provide cultural and theological context for those descriptions

  • Clarify that interpretations vary widely

  • Avoid asserting objective spiritual classifications or outcomes

 

Any corrective or stabilizing work described elsewhere on this site operates within a structured diagnostic framework and is applied only where appropriate, without assuming the literal presence of autonomous entities.

This Knowledge Base does not replace religious guidance, medical care or psychological support. It exists solely to help readers understand how people across traditions interpret and describe experiences of interference or imbalance.


Understanding Black Magic & Evil Eye
 

What is Black Magic
 

Across civilizations, people have used terms such as black magic, witchcraft and the evil eye to describe perceived harm attributed to envy, ill intent or deliberate manipulation. These concepts appear repeatedly in religious texts, folklore and moral teachings, usually as warnings rather than operational explanations.

Rather than granting these ideas autonomous power, sacred traditions consistently treat them as moral violations, spiritual dangers or forms of deception. The language differs, but the underlying message is consistent: seeking to harm others through unseen means is condemned.

This theme appears across major faiths:

“You shall not permit a sorceress to live.” — Exodus 22:18


“They learned what harms rather than benefits them, knowing full well that whoever practiced it would have no share in the Hereafter.” — Qur’an 2:102


“Do not turn to mediums or seek out spiritists for you will be defiled by them.” — Leviticus 19:31


“For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft.” — 1 Samuel 15:23

These passages are not technical descriptions of how harm occurs. They are ethical warnings - cautioning against envy, manipulation, rebellion and misuse of influence.

Black Magic - As a Descriptive Term

In modern usage, black magic is a phrase people often use to describe:

  • Sudden disruption without explanation

  • A feeling of being opposed or undermined

  • Persistent misfortune or instability

 

This Knowledge Base documents how the term is used, not whether such practices objectively function as described.

 

The Evil Eye - Cultural Context

The evil eye appears in Jewish, Christian, Islamic, Hindu and Mediterranean traditions as a metaphor for harm associated with envy or ill will. In most teachings, it functions as a moral warning, not a literal mechanism.

People today may use the term to describe:

  • Loss of clarity or motivation

  • Rising conflict or tension

  • A sense of imbalance following attention or comparison

 

Again, this reflects interpretive language, shaped by culture and belief.

Important Clarification

This Knowledge Base does not assert that black magic or the evil eye operate as independent forces. It explains how people across cultures and faiths have historically described and interpreted distress using spiritual language.

Understanding these terms helps contextualize client experience and vocabulary - especially when individuals seek meaning for events that feel sudden, personal or unresolved.

For applied diagnostic or corrective frameworks used elsewhere on this site, refer to the relevant service pages, which operate through structured methodology and Divine authorization without adopting belief-based assumptions.

Black Magic in Traditional Scholarship - Descriptive Framework

Across religious scholarship and historical texts, black magic is often described not as an abstract force but as a moral violation involving intent, coercion and unseen intermediaries. Different traditions use different language to explain this concept.

In Islamic sources, such intermediaries are referred to as jinn. In Jewish texts, similar beings are described as shedin. Christian theology uses the term demons. While the terminology differs, these traditions share a common warning: attempting to manipulate unseen forces for harm violates divine order and carries consequences.

Importantly, these descriptions are theological and symbolic, not technical explanations. They reflect how societies historically made sense of harm that appeared intentional yet unexplained.

In many accounts, the emphasis is not on how such acts “work,” but on why they are forbidden - because they involve coercion, corruption of intent and reliance on forces outside moral accountability.

Illness, Distress and Symbolic Interpretation

In historical narratives, unexplained illness or misfortune was sometimes attributed to spiritual interference. These interpretations arose in periods before modern diagnostic tools and served as cultural explanations rather than medical conclusions.

Today, such language persists as a way people describe experiences that feel invasive, personal or destabilizing - particularly when conventional explanations feel incomplete.

 

This Knowledge Base documents how that language is used, not whether such causes objectively exist.

No claim is made here that illness is caused by black magic or that spiritual factors replace medical understanding.

Intent, Meaning and Moral Framing

Across traditions, the consistent message is ethical rather than mechanical:
Harmful intent corrupts the individual who carries it, while protection is associated with integrity, humility and alignment with higher moral law.

Sacred texts emphasize purification of intention and reliance on God not as defensive tactics, but as safeguards of conscience and conduct.

Important Boundary

This Knowledge Base section does not describe operative spiritual mechanisms, nor does it assert the existence of spiritual contracts, agents or locks as literal processes.

Applied diagnostic or corrective work referenced elsewhere on this site operates under a separate methodological framework and is not explained here.

This page exists to contextualize belief, language and historical interpretation - not to teach practice, assert causation or validate supernatural claims.

What Are Jinn aka Djinn?
 

Scriptural & Theological Context

The following section presents how jinn are described within Islamic scripture, alongside parallel descriptions found in other religious traditions. These accounts reflect theological narratives and metaphysical worldview, not diagnostic criteria or explanations of present-day events.

This Knowledge Base includes these references to document how different faiths have historically understood unseen beings, using their own language and symbolism.

Long before the creation of humankind another race walked this world - the jinn, beings made from smokeless fire. They lived, built and governed long before Adam was formed from clay. Unlike angels they were granted free will, the ability to believe or rebel, to serve or destroy.

“And He created the jinn from a smokeless flame of fire.” — Qur’an 55:15
“I did not create jinn and humans except to worship Me.” — Qur’an 51:56

 

When humankind was created many jinn resisted the idea of a new race inheriting the earth. Among them was one named Iblis - known in Christianity as Satan - a jinn elevated among the angels who refused to bow to Adam. His defiance marked the beginning of enmity between the two species.

Every ancient tradition speaks of them:

  • The Torah calls them Shedin — beings who share traits of both angels and humans.

  • The Bible describes them as demons or unclean spirits organized in ranks under their chief.

  • The Hindu Vedas refer to Asuras 

  • Buddhist texts describe Mara and his hosts - invisible forces that disturb human peace.

 

Different names, one reality; Unseen intelligences capable of good or evil.

 

Traits of Jinn

Jinn exist parallel to our world, invisible yet close. They eat, drink, reproduce and die but their lives extend far beyond ours. They can traverse distances instantly, influence thought and manipulate emotion. Some live quietly among us, others interfere when invited or provoked through occult practice, envy or energetic weakness.

They are also shape-shifters. They can appear in human form, animal form or remain unseen altogether. Certain animals - especially cats, dogs and birds - can sense them, which explains why pets may suddenly fixate on an empty corner of the room or stare at the ceiling. Jinn can even compress themselves so small as to move like specks of dust through a house, slipping unnoticed through physical barriers.

Jinn are the unseen middle ground between the spiritual and material - neither angelic nor human but both aware and willful. The rebellious among them are called shayatin or devils while the faithful among them worship as we do.

Understanding their existence is not about fear - it’s about awareness and acceptance. Knowing that these beings exist within divine law helps explain why some afflictions, disturbances or negative patterns cannot be explained by science alone.

There is order in their realm just as there is order in ours. Those who create disturbance must face balance and those who carry light are granted permission to restore it. This is where HealerRiz operates - not in superstition but in the unseen architecture of divine law where understanding the jinn means understanding one of the oldest realities in creation.

Important Clarification

This section does not assert that jinn or similar beings are responsible for specific experiences, conditions or outcomes. It documents scriptural descriptions and cross-faith interpretations for educational reference only.

Any applied diagnostic or corrective work referenced elsewhere on this site operates under a separate methodological framework and does not rely on belief-based attribution.

Hamsa hand (Hand of Fatima) with protective eye symbol representing divine protection from envy and the Evil Eye — artwork by HealerRiz.
HealerRiz WebP 130x124_edited.png


What is Evil Eye - Cultural & Scriptural Reference
 

The Evil Eye is one of the most widely referenced concepts across religious texts, folklore and moral teachings. It is commonly described as harm associated with envy, resentment or ill will directed toward another person. Rather than functioning as a technical mechanism, the Evil Eye appears across traditions as a moral and spiritual warning about the destructive weight of jealousy.

References to the Evil Eye appear in multiple sacred sources:

Judaism (Torah): “Beware lest your eye be evil toward your brother.” - Deuteronomy 15:9
 

Christianity (Bible): “Is your eye evil because I am good?” - Matthew 20:15


Islam (Hadith): “The influence of the evil eye is real.” - Sahih Muslim 2188


Hinduism (Atharva Veda): “Let the eye of envy depart and return not again.” - Atharva Veda 4.4.1

 

Across these traditions, the emphasis is consistent: envy corrodes the heart, disrupts harmony and invites imbalance. The warning is ethical rather than instructional.

How the Term Is Commonly Used

In everyday language, people often use evil eye to describe experiences such as:

  • Sudden disruption after attention or praise

  • Loss of clarity or motivation

  • Rising conflict, tension or instability

  • A sense of being opposed or diminished

 

These descriptions reflect interpretive language, shaped by culture and belief. This Knowledge Base documents how the term is used and understood, not whether such effects operate as an independent force.

 

Symbolism and Protective Language

Many cultures developed symbolic objects or phrases - such as the Hamsa, Nazar or spoken blessings - as reminders of humility, gratitude and restraint. These symbols function as cultural safeguards, reinforcing awareness rather than acting as protective mechanisms in themselves.

Sacred teachings consistently emphasize that protection lies not in objects, but in character: gratitude over envy, humility over comparison and reliance on God rather than fixation on others’ intent.

 

Important Clarification

This section does not claim that the Evil Eye causes specific events, illness or misfortune. It explains how the concept appears historically and culturally as a way people interpret disruption linked to envy or ill will.

The Knowledge Base does not assign diagnosis, causation or spiritual blame. It provides context for the language people use when describing lived experience.

Important Clarification

Any applied diagnostic or corrective work referenced elsewhere on this site operates under a separate, structured methodology and does not rely on belief-based attribution or symbolic interpretation.

This page exists to explain meaning, usage and historical reference - not to validate supernatural claims.

Hamsa / Hamza (Hand of Fatima) - Cultural Symbolism

 

The Hamsa, sometimes spelled Hamza, is a hand-shaped symbol found across many cultures of the Middle East, North Africa and South Asia. It is commonly known as the Hand of Fatima in Islamic culture, the Hand of Miriam in Jewish tradition and appears in Christian and pre-Islamic contexts as well.

Historically, the symbol has been used as a cultural reminder rather than a mechanism. The open palm represents awareness, restraint and moral alignment - a visible prompt to remain conscious of intention, humility and ethical conduct.

How the Symbol Is Commonly Understood

Across traditions, the Hamsa is associated with:

  • Mindfulness rather than fear

  • Protection through remembrance rather than objects

  • Awareness of envy, comparison and ill intent

 

Its use reflects a shared human instinct to externalize reminders of internal discipline. The symbol itself is not described in scripture as having independent power.

 

Cross-Faith Context

Sacred teachings consistently emphasize that protection does not come from symbols, but from alignment:

  • Torah teachings warn against envy and inward corruption

  • Bible teachings emphasize contentment and humility

  • Qur’an teachings instruct seeking refuge from envy through remembrance of God

  • Vedic teachings focus on purification of thought and intention

 

Across all traditions, the consistent message is ethical: a heart free of jealousy and malice is not easily disturbed.

 

Cross-Faith Context

This Knowledge Base does not assert that the Hamsa, Hamza or any symbol wards off harm, neutralizes influence or alters outcomes. Its inclusion here documents historical usage and cultural meaning, not efficacy.

Any sense of reassurance people associate with such symbols is best understood as psychological or devotional reinforcement rather than external protection.

 

Relationship to Applied Work Elsewhere on This Site

References to applied diagnostic or corrective work elsewhere on this site operate under separate methodology and do not depend on symbolic objects, rituals or belief systems.

This page exists solely to explain language, symbolism and historical reference commonly encountered when people describe experiences involving envy, disturbance or perceived opposition.

Related Reading

 

When you're ready to explore how people commonly describe and interpret the experiences discussed above, a Diagnostic Intuitive Healing (DIH) session can assess whether any non-physical factors are present and whether corrective work may be appropriate.

If the disruption in your home feels connected to your family line rather than the space itself, read The Truth About Generational Trauma & Ancestral Curses to understand how lineage-based distortions attract interference.
 

 

If you're experiencing disturbances that match what's described here, such as sudden fear, heaviness, pain or ongoing pressure, don't wait for them to deepen.

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    HealerRiz - Spiritual Technologist and Originator of Diagnostic Intuitive Healing (DIH) and Advanced Energy Manipulation (AEM). This site documents applied Spiritual Technology, Remote Diagnostic Healing methodologies and related research. Formal system documentation maintained on GitHubORCID iD & Zenodo

    Group retreats and breathwork experiences are offered separately through BreatheWithSabi.

    © 2016HealerRiz · BreatheWithSabi

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