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What’s my story?
There are moments in life when something inside us quietly says, this is no longer your path. In the early 2000s, I was working in the corporate world , competent, busy, externally successful , but something in me was restless. I couldn't ignore the feeling that there was another way of living, one more aligned with who I really was.
In 2001, I took a leap. I left the stability of my corporate role and followed a quiet but insistent inner voice, a voice that led me to natural healing. That same year, I founded the Arura Healing Centre, and began what would become a lifelong path of study, practice, and service.
Sometimes the most life-changing moments begin quietly, with something as simple as a flyer.
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In 2005, someone left a flyer at my healing centre. It was for a public talk on Tibetan Sa Che, being given by a visiting Tibetan doctor. I didn’t know then that picking up that piece of paper would change the course of my life. But I followed a feeling, a gentle pull of curiosity, and went along to the talk.
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That was the first time I saw Dr Nida Chenagtsang. Something in me recognised something in him. It wasn’t just what he said, though the depth and clarity of his teaching was striking. It was the presence the connection, the joy and lightness with which he shared profound knowledge, the sense that he was carrying something ancient and sacred, but offering it with complete accessibility and warmth.
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That evening began a journey that has shaped my life, work, and inner path ever since.
In the Tibetan tradition, the teacher is not just a source of knowledge, they are a living transmission. They hold the teachings in their body, speech, and mind. They guide you, not only through technique, but through example. Meeting your teacher is not about devotion in the abstract, it’s about resonance, trust, and transformation.
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