Healers are comfortable to live with the contradictions and shortcomings in themselves and others. They deeply accept themselves and are comfortable knowing that some answers may never be found.

Healers struggle and question less and less on their journey of faith. They feel much more comfortable with who they are and have become. Healers have found answers to some questions in their lives and love, but they are also comfortable knowing that some answers may never be found.
Healers realise that other perspectives do not push them away from their own faith. However, they do feel that this openness to different worldviews will move them to live more simply, on the one hand, and to become more fully human, on the other hand.
Healers have a new understanding of who they are. They constantly discover that throughout their life the ‘good’ and the ‘bad’ made them who they are. They accept themselves deeply, embracing all the different sides of their complex personalities.
They are often helped in this by kind but truthful spiritual directors who usher them out of denial into acceptance. Healers should consider letting go of old habits and replacing them with life-affirming disciplines.
God is able to take the mess of our past and turn it into a message. He takes the trials and tests and turns them into a testimony. — Christine Caine
Nurture and explore your faith. Make sense of how you believe, who you are and why you do things the way you do.
Interpret × Reactive
Communication offers thoughtful insight and reflection on conversations already happening, with limited agency or direction-setting.
Right to play comes from attentiveness and credibility.
Interpret × Intentional
Media is used to interpret events and trends with discernment, intentionally guiding understanding and perspective.
Right to play comes from authority rooted in trust.
Interpret × Shaping
Meaning and direction are held together. Media actively shapes public understanding, frames complex issues, and weaves stories into an ongoing narrative that guides action.
Right to play comes from stewardship, not power.
Experience × Reactive
Human stories are shared in response to moments and events. Communication creates warmth and connection, but lacks sustained narrative direction.
Right to play comes from trust and relational depth.
Experience × Intentional
Stories are selected and shaped with care, creating rhythm, coherence, and a growing sense of shared identity over time.
Right to play comes from discernment and restraint.
Experience × Shaping
Lived experience is deliberately framed to guide identity, values, and belonging. Media is seen as formative, not neutral.
Right to play comes from legitimacy and wisdom.
Aggregate × Reactive
Media is used primarily to share announcements and respond to immediate needs. Communication is practical, timely, and service-oriented, with little emphasis on interpretation or long-term direction.
Right to play comes from usefulness and reliability.
Aggregate × Intentional
Communication is planned and consistent, focusing on producing and distributing content. Structure and routines are strong, but shared meaning is still largely unprocessed.
Right to play comes from discipline and predictability.
Aggregate × Shaping
High-volume communication drives visibility and influence. Media is used to amplify reach and momentum, often prioritising scale over depth.
Right to play comes from scale, confidence and resilience.