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The goal of this clinical study is to learn the impact of two Akashic Records sessions on mental health symptoms in adults. We want to see how sessions are linked to stress, anxiety, and depression, and to resilience (ability to bounce back) and feelings of connectedness (to self, community, and humanity).
Main questions this study will answer are:
After two sessions, what is the impact on stress, anxiety, and depression? After two sessions, what is the impact on resilience and connectedness? How do participants describe their experience of the sessions? After two sessions, what are participants' views of their problems (insight), emotional experiences (impact) and observable behaviors in their daily life?
What participants will do:
Complete online surveys about their mood at four points: before the first session, before the second session, after the second session, and again 2 months later.
Surveys include:
DASS-21 (Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale) CD-RISC-10 (Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale) WATTS (Connectedness Scale) A short demographic form and satisfaction survey
Attend two individual Akashic Records sessions (50-90 minutes each) over private video platform with a licensed clinical social worker (principal investigator) The first 50 participants will also join a one-hour interview with open ended questions with a licensed clinical social worker (co-investigator) about one week after the second session to share their experience in their own words.
Who can take part:
Adults ages 18 and older who can read and consent in English and who have experienced stress, anxiety, or low mood in the past year.
How the research will happen:
Sessions are held by secure video call. Participants will also complete private online surveys before, during, and after the sessions. Some participants may be invited to share their experiences in a one-on-one interview. All information is kept private and names are removed before analysis.
Risks and benefits:
Talking about personal topics may bring up strong emotions. Licensed clinicians conduct sessions, offer support, and provide referrals if needed.
Possible benefits include new insights, greater peace or meaning, and improved coping; benefits are not guaranteed.
Why this matters:
Many people seek spiritual or transpersonal support for emotional concerns. This pilot study will provide early evidence on whether Akashic Records sessions may be a helpful, low-risk option and will guide future research.
Full description
The study aims to address the following research question: How do Akashic Records sessions impact mental health as evidenced by changes in self-reported stress, anxiety, and depression, and changes in resilience and connectedness?
This study is a single-arm, mixed-methods, exploratory pilot trial designed to evaluate the effects of Akashic Records sessions on mental health outcomes. The intervention consists of two individual sessions (one 90 minutes and one 50 minutes) delivered virtually by a licensed clinical social worker trained in Akashic Records channeling.
All participants are assigned to the same intervention arm consisting of two Akashic Records sessions; the study does not include randomization or a control/comparator group. To reduce potential confounding, participants are instructed to notify the research team of any changes in their mental health care or spiritual practices during the study period. They are also asked to maintain stability in their usual activities within these domains to support interpretability of pre-post outcomes.
The sessions follow a standardized structure to ensure reproducibility. Each session begins with an opening procedure that includes a brief Akashic prayer and a short reflection period for intention-setting. During the channeling process, the clinician conveys impressions received through intuitive modalities such as imagery (clairvoyance), auditory impressions (clairaudience), empathic resonance (clairsentience), and cognitive impressions (claircognizance). Information is verbalized in real time, and participants are invited to reflect, ask questions, and engage in dialogue to deepen integration. The clinician provides empathic support and reflective listening but does not apply structured psychotherapeutic interventions. Sessions conclude with a structured summary, identification of participant takeaways, and a formal closing statement.
The primary focus is on changes in validated clinical scales: the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale (DASS-21), the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC-10), and the WATTS Connectedness Scale. Assessments are collected at four timepoints: baseline (T0), prior to the second session (T1), after the second session (T2), and 60 days following the intervention (T3).
In addition to quantitative endpoints, qualitative data are obtained from semi-structured interviews conducted with the first 50 participants until data saturation is reached. These interviews explore participant motivations, perceived benefits, integration of insights, and challenges. Transcripts are analyzed using structural and in vivo coding, followed by thematic analysis to generate emergent themes.
Approximately 100 adults will be enrolled, with inclusion criteria requiring age 18 or older, ability to provide informed consent, and willingness to engage in discussion of personal and emotional themes. Exclusion criteria include substance use disorder within the past 12 months, psychotic disorders, active suicidal ideation, or prior Akashic Records sessions within the past six months.
This research is conducted under expedited review and approval by Pearl IRB. Data are collected via HIPAA-compliant platforms (Jotform, Google Meet, and Dedoose), de-identified with unique participant IDs, and securely stored in encrypted systems.
The principal investigator will deliver all Akashic Records sessions but will not have access to raw survey data, qualitative transcripts, or primary statistical outputs, thereby reducing potential bias. The co-investigator will conduct prescreen interviews, review informed consent with participants, administer semi-structured interviews, and lead the qualitative analysis process with support from the independent research team. The research coordinator will manage participant communications, distribute validated clinical scales at designated timepoints, monitor adherence to study timelines, and ensure data is securely collected and logged.
This study is the first formal attempt to evaluate the Akashic Records in a structured clinical research design. Findings are intended to provide foundational evidence and inform the design of future controlled studies examining transpersonal and nonlocal interventions as potential contributors to mental health outcomes.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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