Think of yourself like a cup.
Your soul is what wants to come through you — your fullest expression, your impact, the life you're actually here to live. The cup is your body, mind, and emotions. The cup is what holds it.
Right now, most people are a degrading styrofoam cup with old coffee at the bottom trying to hold something beautiful. And an amazing experience of light and life cannot fit into a vessel that's full of fear, insecurity, doubt, trauma, and limited beliefs. There's no room.
So we clean and upgrade the cup. We remove the blockages. We expand the capacity. Every time you work through what's stopping you, you're elevating your frequency and vibration to hold more. Styrofoam becomes plastic. Plastic becomes glass. Glass becomes crystal. The cups never stop — they can get infinitely more elegant and capable, and they can hold more.
Here's something most people miss. The cup doesn't only break from pain. It also breaks from too much of what's good.
When a styrofoam cup gets too much coming in — too much energy, responsibility, success, light — it overflows and cracks. Not from failure. From blessings it wasn't built to hold.
I lived this. I got into a sales org in college and built a huge team. There was so much light, energy, and responsibility coming in — and I couldn't hold it. It went to my head. Clouded my judgment. Clouded my actions. Clouded my sense of self. And it broke.
That's why this work matters even for people who are winning. It's not just about fixing what hurts. It's about whether your vessel can actually hold what you're calling in. You can get to the top of a mountain and fall off because the cup wasn't built to stand there.
What does a constricted vessel actually feel like? Limited. Small. Constrained. Good things aren't coming in, or if they do, they're not lasting. Things feel like a struggle. Everyone's styrofoam cup looks a little different — but the signature is the same. Not enough room for what life is trying to give you.
The work isn't to want more. It's to expand what you can hold.
— Luke
