Grieving Voices

Carolina Sotomayor: From Fatherless Daughter to Womb Healer

September 03, 2024 Victoria Volk, The Unleashed Heart, LLC Season 5 Episode 210

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Today's guest, Carolina Sotomayor, is a renowned fertility Reiki womb healer who shares how Reiki helped her conceive her son. We also dive deeper into her childhood stories and the emotional wounds that created what Carolina believes were the energetic blocks to conceiving.

Carolina's Path to Healing 🧘‍♀️

  • Personal Struggles: Initially struggling with conception despite no medical issues, Carolina turned to Reiki after suggestions from her grief therapist and a psychic.
  • Journey Through Adversity: Her pregnancy was filled with challenges, including anxiety, surgeries, and postpartum depression. Reiki played a pivotal role in her recovery.

The Power of Energy Healing 💫

  • Reiki Success Stories: With experience in four different lineages and over 100 successful “Reiki babies,” Carolina’s practice connects mothers-to-be with their spirit babies.
  • Make A Baby Membership: Offers live sessions, guided meditations, prerecorded modules, and masterclasses for women on their fertility journeys.

Embracing Self-Care 🎗️

  • Cultural Reflections: Highlights how societal conditioning often undervalues self-care leading to involuntary life pauses such as illnesses or accidents.
  • Nonnegotiable Self-Care: Stresses make self-care nonnegotiable in releasing trapped emotions and preventing physical ailments and emotional blockages.

Overcoming Childhood Trauma 🛤️

  • Tumultuous Upbringing: Raised by a single mother struggling with alcoholism and anger issues, she faced neglect from both parents post-divorce.
  • Resilience & Boundaries: Shares insights on generational pain while emphasizing the importance of setting boundaries for emotional well-being.

Transformative Insights 🌺

  • Recognizes that ignoring personal healing can lead to profound crises.
  • Advocates for prioritizing oneself as central to breaking cycles of trauma.

Carolina’s experiences underscore the transformative power of confronting unresolved emotions. She passionately advocates recognizing self-worth while creating supportive communities worldwide to help women achieve their motherhood dreams.

Let this episode inspire you to embrace your journey toward healing and hope! 💖

RESOURCES:

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Victoria Volk: Hello. Hello. Welcome to another episode of grieving Voices. Today, my guest is Carolina Sotomayor. She is a fertility, rapey, womb healer, serving women who are trying to conceive. She's the founder of Make A Baby membership, a monthly membership providing monthly live Reiki healing Zoom calls, Reiki guided meditations, prerecorded healing modules and master classes. Carolina has personally coached and helped women all over the world with over a hundred Reiki Babies into bringing over a hundred Reiki Babies into the world. She has a tune to four different lineages of Reiki and has a proven medium connecting mom to their spirit babies. After conceiving her own son with Reiki, Carolina has been on a mission to help women conceive with energy healing and heal through pregnancy and postpartum. I'm so excited to have you here because this is a unique line of work. And reiki isn't unique, but I love how you've adapted it and have wielded its power for good and positive in your own life, but also in the lives of other So thank you for the work that you're doing, bringing motherhood and parenthood to over a hundred people now.

Carolina Sotomayor: It's been exciting. Thank you so much for having me. I it was I believe in divine timing, intervention happening. And for me, Reiki was when it was happening to me and offered to me, I didn't know it would end up here. So for me, I was struggling to conceive, and I was a newly wed, very much a struggling newly wed, married to the best man I had ever known and still heavily married too.
But we were not getting pregnant. There was nothing wrong with me. They said, you're just really sad. So I started grief therapy. Still not getting pregnant.
And then I plateaued in my healing journey with her, and she's like, you need to either do Reiki or get on an anti antidepressant because I was still the sad girl. Also, at that same time, I had fallen off my horse and it was put on medical leave. That conversation of, like, you need to do reiki or get try antidepressants because the trauma wasn't leaving my body. I was still sad after her going for her for over a year and a half. Sometimes twice a week, it was definitely weekly. And essentially, she wanted me to get reiki because one I was introducing, I was like, I I'm purifying my body and birth control, like, I don't wanna put anything else on my body. And that's just a personal decision. I support anyone that if you do what's best for you and your medical team. So that same week because I had suffered a concussion from falling off my horse. I went to my favorite psychic town where I was taking workshops, and she had offered she's I she's, like, your throat and your sacral plexus shockers are blocked. You need Reiki. You don't need any crystals for your concussion. And it's, like, I don't know. I'm not ready yet, but then this then the therapist that same week had recommended and they're two separate sources, not related to each other. So I was like, wait a minute. What is this? So I went with because I was still, like, I was still very medically inclined at that point. And I went and got Reiki the next week. And then the next month, we were testing positive with our son, Oli, who's now almost eight. He's seven. Second grader. And I continued to get ricky through my pregnancy, and it helped me with my anxiety. I had prenatal anxiety. I had my gallbladder removed. I had totaled my car.
And Henry Gold Butter removed within a week of each other. Ollie, very much, is a miracle baby, had a really traumatic birth, because of the birth trauma and just the way that the hospital handled everything. Allie ended up with NICU. I had a nasty infection. Allie had an infection from a prolonged labor. My Reiki master sent me Reiki during that time. My postpartum was very tumultuous with just a lot of irrational thoughts, and I just got diagnosed with severe PPA and PPD, which is postpartum depression and anxiety. And through by postpartum, I really leaned into the talk therapy and the Reiki as a combination. And it took me about eighteen months to fully come out of it, but because of the consistent support, of both together. That helps me come out of the darkness is what I like to say.
It allowed me to function. I stayed home with him for four months. I had six months postpartum. I got certified in Reiki one and two, Levels one and two, which gives you the ability to give yourself Reiki and others. And I started to give Reiki to myself and my son. He suffered from chronic ear infections. I suffered I had mastitis several several times, so I would give Reiki to myself, and I would in support of my breast milk supply because it's all heart chakra based. And I was still I I became sad again. I was sad because I had not gotten the birth that I wanted to. We knew we only had one child and I had lost mine shot. I was grieving the loss of that positive birth and everything I had worked for. And when people say, well, you just have a healthy baby. Wasn't it worth it? I was like, no. That's that's bullshit.
Like, I I got this is a one time, right of passage moments for a woman. And I did not get what I had painted or I had written down in my size nine font birth plan, and my birth plan had gone sideways. So I had spent I spent a big majority of my time reliving my birth in that eighteen months and that's what plagued me and my darkness. And I was fine taking care of baby. I was happy to climb as long as I was with him, but I'd just be these moments of things that went wrong with my birth that plagued me. And you know, ups like, just certain things that were very violent in my birth that were unexpected and just really shook me. And it took me a long time to come out of, but it was because of the ragey that I learned how to heal myself I learned about energetics truly in my postpartum of, like, things that erupted from my childhood that because I was so sleep deprived and I was so tired and I was just really at my most raw, your mind can can sometimes unlock things that you were not prepared to face again or remember or remember even that they occurred at all the first time. So in my postpartum, I felt like my childhood abuse and my trauma has just kind of exploded. And my wound healing really started was as the postpartum. I had an abortion in my twenties.
I had been raped in my twenties. My and that really plagued a lot with my birth trauma and combined was really, really messy and really dark along with a lot of, like, worth issues in my dad's death, like, really missing him and really trying to, like, have this baby and my favorite person died. And I really wish he was here, the one person that I was so close to. How can I exist in a world where I have this beautiful baby and I don't have him to share it with? Was a lot.
But with Ricky and being able to heal myself, it was more about moment by moment as those things came up because it didn't all happen at once. It was riding the wave and understanding that It's okay to feel what you feel, but it's about releasing it and understanding, okay, what do I need to do to get back to what's really important and putting boundaries around my grief I learned that was there there's it's okay for me to put a pause on things so I can still be a working mom and be present or I need to be present, but then also create space. In time where I get to feel those feelings, honor them, and release them because I was still working a manufacturing job. I was in pharmaceutical manufacturing. It was a very demanding job, breastfeeding, pumping, and taking him picking up up from day care. And that was a very real thing, breadwinner of the family. I still had to be a person, so that was the main thing is that I would Reiki would allow me to be grounded enough to function but also I could go deeper when I needed to. And that's really the gist of it, you know, that was long.

Victoria Volk: What do you say to those people listening that say, well, I don't have time. I don't have time. To for energy healing work. We are in this Western society that's going to go go go. So, I I mean, I know the answer. Like, we just have to make our self care non negotiable, but how did you how did you do that? Like, what did that look like? Like, what how did you decide

Carolina Sotomayor: on that? I have chills. It's very easy. Either you make the time and you prioritize yourself or whatever you believe in will make you life will make it happen for you or the universe or God whatever is your belief. There was a term I once heard and say, God's smack God will smack you if you don't do it first.
Like, he'll show you signs of what you need to do, or the universe will send you hints. If you don't take care of it yourself, they'll put you in an adult time out is what I was calling it. When I fell off my horse, that was the first time I was forced physically to sit still in my entire life. I did not know it at the time, but I was in fight or flight. And it was the first time that I had to sit still. Couldn't be on a phone. I couldn't drive. I had depth of perception, like, with my vision, like, my foot would miss the curb because of my concussion. I had fell in a ditch off my horse and the con and I had memory problems. So I couldn't drive can be in the iPad, I couldn't read, my eyes couldn't focus on a page, I would get dizzy, and I couldn't remember the the numbers. They would say, okay, here's a series of numbers, say them backwards, and I couldn't do it. So I was out of work for eight weeks. And that is when Ricky was introduced to me. And I wasn't I lived in a one floor apartment, so it was very safe for me. But basically, I just sat there and I would welcome anyone that would come and sit with me I couldn't do anything else, but often the time people were busy, so it's during that eight weeks that I got to sit alone with myself and learn to really be okay with that because there's really nothing else to do.
And that was my opinion, god saying, hey, you've been running and you can't run away from your feelings anymore. Your dad died. Your horse died. And you're married. What if you wanna have a baby, you need to fill your stuff. And that was the first time that I was open to really making a shift of when she had the conversation with me. And the Ricky was offered to me. And then I had the Ricky session and I and my husband, he had to drive me and pick me up. And I came out, I felt like I was floating. I had remembered I was like, it was the first time that I had a huge shift in my energy. I felt like this fifty pound boulder ever since my dad had died had been lifted from my chest. And that was something that changed for me. So for me, it's my opinion, what I tell my clients is pay attention to the patterns and the signs. Either take care of it yourself or something will happen where it will cause you to. And sometimes that looks different from me. I was able to recover from my concussion and I went back to work and I went back to work and I was pregnant. Mhmm. So or some people get sick. Physical illness is a manifestation of something of a stuck emotion in your body. And we're not we are conditioned to stuff our emotions and not release them. Our emotions last for ninety seconds, but we have to be consciously trained? Like, we have to be trained? We have to consciously be mindful of do I wanna keep this? Am I ready to release this? Or are we gonna release it? And I think that I mean, that's something I'm constantly reminding my son up. I'm like, okay. Breath work. We're gonna release this. Are you ready to release it? No, I'm still mad. Okay. Let's hold on to it a little bit longer. Check-in, are you ready to release this? And like, this is me breaking that cycle with him. You don't have to hold on to it. So that prevents disease and him. That prevents you know, infertility issues in him and them getting stuck in his home because men have wounds too. And our emotions can get stored anywhere in our body, but the most commonly concentrated a concentrated area are our wounds is that particular chakra. And infertility is just a really stuffed emotional reservoir that needs to be released is what I find. So either take care of it yourself or I think you will be made too. I do know that from all of my work, there is a pattern. When people say, oh, I just don't have time to heal, obviously, it's not a priority for them. Well, we have to look at a couple of things why it's not. Either they're putting other people before themselves or they're too scared to do it at the moment.
Both both are that is just a valid Those are things that people do. However, I ask you is who is more important than you? And who is going to save you when you do have that life moment when you're in hospital or you fall off your horse? Or you have that car crash or you are whatever. He was going to fix your body in that moment. They might be able to bring you soup. They might be able to take your kids to the park. They might be able to do some grocery shopping for you to help you out a little bit. But you are the most important person in your life, and I really believe that in your relationship with yourself, and it and when people don't prioritize themselves, it's a lack of worthiness. For me? it is the root causes? Like, you don't feel worthy to prioritize yourself or they have to prove or earn their worthiness to put themselves for, like so if they do need to have a break or they need to have energy healing, well, I have to do this entire to do list before I actually earn that time out or that that relief. And for me is that is that's an indicative thing of, like, you learned something in your childhood where you had to earn, rest. You had to earn healing, and that is not correct. I will battle anyone for that.
Healing is your birthright. Rest is your birthright. You are born worthy of being happy and your life is not meant to suffer. Will we suffer? Yes. But it does and how we move through that is really a choice in my opinion. So for me is, like, where where are you prior who are you prioritizing? And for me as a mom I had to learn because I burnt myself several times out is the more that I put myself first and I am pouring from a full cup, the happier my son is the better my marriage is, the happier my partner is, the calmer and more emotionally regulated my house is. Because for us, I'm the heartbeat of the house. So if I'm on if I'm dysregulated, if I'm angry, if I'm super upset, if I'm depressed, all shit's going haywire.
So that's that's my when I put it in non frame, it's, like, everyone else is gonna thrive when you thrive. When you are and when they see you actively caring for yourself and prioritizing yourself, that is teaching them that they need to do the same. Like, my little says, I need a loan time. I I've had enough of you. I need I need a loan time, please. And he goes in his room or he goes in his reading corner. Legit, bro, that's good. Like, that is, like, that's generational breaking actively. So I it's not just, like, you're not gonna get rewarded for burning yourself out or putting yourself last. Actually, you're going to condition people to know that's how you want to be treated.

Victoria Volk: And then you'll end up in the hospital or in an accident or

Carolina Sotomayor: Yeah. All of these things. That's just my lived life experience. I'm forty one, so I still think I'm twenty. But I mean, I've I've lived a little at this point and seen a lot and and human design, if you're into that, I'm a projector.
So I am to guide. But as a healer, regardless of your human design projector or not, as a healer, and you take on that occupation or that hat in a in a lifetime, you have to live through some things so that you can be at least one or two steps ahead to provide enough wisdom or insight for the people that are going to go through the same things you did. Which means you have to live, fall down, crash, and burn, have your heart broken. You stab it a couple of times emotionally. Right.
I'm a three five.

Victoria Volk: Three five. That was my second that was my second. I'm a

Carolina Sotomayor: three five point. I teach human design in my membership to use to help manifest better for your babies. Okay. So Yeah. It's pretty simple.
It's just the arrow at the top. It's the point left or point right. And then looking at your defined centers, but that's how I think about it. It's like it's like the what's asked, like, okay. So I don't have time, but where are you putting your time?
As an entrepreneur, I over the past year, I have looked at sales, I've looked at revenue and things like that. And I was, like, where am I really spent? Where am I why do I, you know, have time to do the things that do make money? I had identified the things that didn't make money. And what was I doing?
I had to perform an audit. I the things that don't make me money are not important. The things that do make me money and create impact on my audience, those are the things I'm gonna spend eighty percent of my time on. The other things don't matter. They don't even I don't even do them anymore.
So where are you spending your time? Who's consuming it? And how much of it do you have left over as a current state? And why are these people more important than you and your well-being?

Victoria Volk: I love that because energy is currency. Right? Is oh, yes. And I

Carolina Sotomayor: like to put it as the word as attention. Who has your attention?

Victoria Volk: Do a self audit. Right?

Carolina Sotomayor: Self audit. Do an inventory. It'll be a surprise.

Victoria Volk: I just wanna touch on too something that you said that, you know, how physical things manifest. And that is completely true. Like, in the work that I do is in grief recovery and what I've learned about grief and my own story and the story Right. People that I've been in my podcast and that I've worked with. When we look at our lives like, okay, fender benders, blowing up horse, accidents, missteps, if you're kind of known to be the clumsy person or and physical manifestations, right, migraines or body pain that has no explanation, like, fibromyalgia, you know, things like this.
Like, this is grief. Friends. This is grief. What is it that you are holding on to? That you are unwilling to let go of?
Or that your body is screaming to you? To be energetically released. And so you touched on it growing up, but you what can we dive deeper into what you said?

Carolina Sotomayor: Up in book, go for it. I love having these deep conversations.

Victoria Volk: So growing up, you haven't mentioned your mom

Carolina Sotomayor: Mhmm.

Victoria Volk: And sometimes the mother wounds. Can you attach to the mom? Can you elaborate what your childhood was like,

Carolina Sotomayor: oh, sure. It's funny. We talk about the ones that are ruined a lot in fertility, father wound too. Mhmm. I have recently put a lot of effort into my mother wound because I spent a lot of, like, the past decade. Telling my father wouldn't. My childhood was I was it was very tumultuous. It was very chaotic. Full of different people. My parents got separated when my dad gave my mom an ultimatum and he didn't want a third child. I was the third child. She chose to keep me and they got divorced. Formally when I was eleven months old and she moved from Florida to Pennsylvania and she was a single mom that eventually just stopped to stopped growing at that point. Emotionally. And from what I have learned from my healing with a lot of therapy, hypnosis, and a shaman, Anne Rieke is my mom was ill equipped to be a single mom of three children, that had had a magnitude of issues individually. And she is an active functioning alcoholic with anger issues and the most unhealed person I've ever met but I have learned that and what I have grown to deeply appreciate and love for her is she's the ultimate survivor. And what I have identified her life purpose was to endure and survive so that I could launch from there. And appreciating and seeing her as a person has allowed me to see her more as my mom instead of I used to call her I won't share her name, but I used to call her by her first name. And that was because it was easier for me to just use that. It was really hard because of all of the things that had been done said and it was really difficult for me to use the word mom. So I would call her by her first name. She actually kind of coming to visit next week, but my childhood was with her and then my brother and sister both My brother graduated high school, went into the military, my sister decided to go in to live with my dad at age fourteen, and I was young, I was kindergarten, first grade when all this happened, and they dipped. And I was alone. So I was her I was an only child from early elementary age. And then I left her at age fifteen to Intellate with my dad.
And I graduated high school and did college in Florida, and then I moved to Nebraska when I was in my when I was twenty nine. So that's pretty much my span. But when I went from a single mom household to a single dad, it was not without abuse. My dad never hit me, but I didn't know what an emotional abuse was or mental abuse or or financial abuse. I just didn't know any of those things.
Until probably I got married, and I started with a different therapist. And I didn't know he was a narcissist. But he was I felt safe with him because he didn't he didn't hit me. So I identified abuse as physical abuse, as like he didn't hit me. Oh, this is what safety is. At least it's calmer. He doesn't yell. But it it was it was very controlling. He was very he would wait in my parking lot. I'd soccer practice.
He would wait during prom. He drove me there waiting in the hotel parking lot, picked me up. It was very there was no independence. Wanted to pick my college classes for a semester, I mean, just very controlling Latino dad but, like, beyond normal. So I went from being abused and trying to avoid conflict and being trying to be perfect straight a student to you have to be perfect straight a student.
This is what you have to live up to. This is what your sister did. You're the only child here in the house again, and he hadn't been a parent for a long time because my sister had been out of the house. My sister and my brother are, like, ten and twelve years older than me. And and that is really significant for me because I it was it was again feeling unwanted, hearing the story of, like, you've never been wanted by him.
I chose to keep you, but then you're not, like, very loving or wanted, and then going to, well, you're only here because there is nowhere else to put you. And you and your mom, obviously, you're not getting along. That was an understatement. So it was a lot to work through and feel very much a man abandoned and neglected emotionally. Even physically, we run food stamps. My mom, we were the when I live with my mom, we were the family that went to the pantry, and I remember getting, like, this large thing of baloney. And cheese. And I learned to slice the baloney at a really young age to make baloney sandwiches. I learned how to make my own, like I knew how to use the stove and She was gone a lot. She we lived in a trailer on some land next to her sister and her husband. And her husband was really nice, but he made it very clear that, you know, we were visitors. Perfect. And we lived there from one to fifteen. But you I could you I could kick you guys out at any time. So there was not an there was not a strong feeling of being wanted anywhere. And that was something I really struggled when it affected my self esteem. I felt very ugly, got bullied a lot. It was not a very easy time in my life for sure. But what I do take away from all of those things was what not to do. I knew for a long time, like, during my teenage years, early twenties.
I was like, I don't wanna be a parent. I don't wanna get married. But then I matured. I healed. I got into the European college. I took advantage of those services. And and I just learned, like, some of the shit that happened to me was really fucked up. And it wasn't my fault because I got blamed for everything. This is the youngest. You're the one who broke up the family and that's a huge reason like I just don't get along with my siblings. They're both toxic. They think I'm toxic and that's okay. You know, I haven't seen them since we settled my dad's estate and that's okay. I wish them well and I didn't used to. I wish them well. I don't know anything about their lives. They never been to my wedding. They didn't know anything about my husband or his son. And that's okay. Like, I have peace in neutrality about that decision. I am now I'm not emotionally charged where I'm like, I hate you. No. Go do you and I appreciate you. Balnges are set for a reason. You don't want me.
I don't want you. It is for valid reasons. I feel like they find me threatening because I still talk to my mom, and they are no contact with her. And they blame her for a lot. But they had very different life experiences. They grew up with them as a married couple with two parents in a home for part of their lives. I have no memory of them being married. I have no memory or life experiences other than two people who created a trial that they accidentally made and they both equally hated each other. My brother and sister grew up in a home where My mom was a state home mom a state home mom and they had barbecues with my grandpa and visits with with my dad's parents from Ecuador and my mom cooking and birthday parties in the backyard. I mean, it was the same house I lived in with him, but very different life experiences, and I respect that. So they have a very different emotional feeling in regard for my mom, but I did learn about emotional availability because of my siblings. I learned what it's like to not be emotionally available to people And I was like, well, that's exactly what I mean. I don't want to be shut off from people. I want to be united with people. So that was a key thing that I learned at a very young age was I want to be emotionally available. I want to be vulnerable. I want to be accessible so I can connect with people. I don't want to feel cold. And that's essentially what I took away from that. But I I think that It was not it was not an easy childhood that's for sure.

Victoria Volk: And this is a perfect example of how growing up in the same home. You have a very different perspective and a different lens of how you look at life and Mhmm. Because all relationships are unique, even if you would have all grown up in the at the same in the same time frame, in the same home, you still would have had your own perspectives, your own experiences because your relationships would have been unique. The word that comes up for me in as I was hearing you share was was shame.

Carolina Sotomayor: A lot of shame. I'd still something I struggle with. I feel I feel like I apologize a lot or So there's guilt and shame still, like, shame that I went through the shame that I I don't talk to them. That's still something I have not fully healed or even, like, that's a new one for me. I just discovered that probably.
I saw a TikTok maybe eight months ago, less than a year ago, and it was like, shame. I was like, that's an emotion I haven't danced with yet.

Victoria Volk: And it's insidious.

Carolina Sotomayor: Right. So it is that would be probably next year of healing that I would need to do, but definitely a lot of shame because there was a lot of embarrassment. There was a lot of things that shouldn't have happened. That did happen and that we're real and that we're hidden. A lot of secrets

Victoria Volk: and secrets really are what keep people separate. Barry, thank you for sharing.

Carolina Sotomayor: Always welcome.

Victoria Volk: And all of that being said, with your father passing and your siblings kind of creating this unpleasant environment because you said they sued the estate. Mhmm. At the same time you're trying to conceive a child, would you agree? And what would you say to or add to this idea that grief is often like, what blocks us from greatness in our lives.

Carolina Sotomayor: A hundred percent grief was the number one thing that blocked me from conceiving. And once I started to feel safe, after he had passed is what was the result of that one rapey session? I was able to conceive because what I associated my dad with at that point in my life, not anymore. But at that point, I had related safety with my dad because there was an abandonment wound there from him and little girls want their daddy's for particularly for me, I wanted to be a daddy's girl. And once we reconnected, I had to work really hard to keep his attention. And once he died, I was like, I don't have that safety anymore. Because when I did have his attention and when we were good and we were in speaking terms, I felt safe. I felt whole. I felt like I had everything I needed. And then and I feel like death is very bizarre. Like, a person that would call me every day or would pick up every day and send me an email and the emails were dear little girl. I stopped. And it was so weird because the people I had lost prior to that, they didn't have consistent communication. They weren't active in my life the way my father was up till his death. And having to write the check for his cremation, it was all very surreal. Like, it's just so weird that they go from existing and talking to, like, they weren't here at all, except some things. So

Victoria Volk: was it unexpected?

Carolina Sotomayor: He had colon cancer and he had stopped going to the doctor. He had a large mass on the side of his belly and never would go to the doctor. So what happened was I was in Nebraska. He was in Florida. He took a taxi to the hospital, checked himself into the emergency room. They admitted him. I got an accidental call. From a person, from his cell phone, and she was speaking Spanish. And I said, who is this? I was working in my cubicle. And the lady said, this is your dad's nurse. He's in the hospital. And then she hung up. And then my dad called back and I was like, my dad had never been with another woman since my mom. So I was like, who is this? I mean, it was a very strange occurrence. Like, my dad was always alone or he was like, he had never been with another person. So for another person to have possession or even to speak on his cell phone was very alarming. So And he goes, I'm fine. I'm like, where are you? He goes, I'm fine. I was like, where are you? And he and he was like, I'm in the hospital. I'm like, tell me everything. And it took a couple of phone calls of me harassing because he hung up on me. And I called back, and he was like, I'm in the hospital. I flew out the next morning, and he was very sick. And I had seen him two months prior, and I he did not look well. And he said, we should go to the doctor. You know, He was a very independent, strong minded person that could not be influenced by anyone.
So he slowly declined over the next three weeks from there. He got a colonoscopy in it. The colon cancer hadn't metastatized to his liver. And all over in it, and he passed away. He went into hospice. And I was in a cart next to him the night he had passed. The ladies came in at six AM to check on him. I sat up, and then they said he's taking his last breath. And then that was it. And it was, like, six AM on April sixth. My god to stay in it was a Catholic hospital. It was really beautiful. And I said, that's that's all he wanted was for me, like, he had stopped talking, but he knew. He's like, I know this is gonna happen. He's like, I just want us to be in a space where we can be together. He didn't want me staying in a hotel. I've been seeing him with friends in our hotel, and he goes, I just want you with me. He's so worried about money. And I was, like, just stay with me. And I was, like, okay.
But it took me a while to get him in out of the hospital into a private hospice. So we were able to do that the last two days, but the the last night, I was able to finally get a caught and I sat next to him and I sat next to his bed and it was so nice. And I just remember them coming in, and it was, like, so fast. And I just set up, and I was, like, stunned. And I just started making phone calls at that point.
This really, like, texted my brother. He's like, you need to come. He's gone. And then, like, texting, like, my I call her my fairy godmother, like, she used to be my old boss. And I was like, Rosa, you need to come. And my friends my best friend's dad was incredible support. So he was like, I need to come. And they came and then I had to handle the cremation and just having people that didn't have to be there that were just really looking out for me because as a thirty year old, I didn't know what to do. No one tells you, like, my best friend's dad, he taught me how to drive. And he was like, come with me. You can't see him be bagged. Come with me. We're gonna go we're gonna go to another four. I was like, I just need to be with him. I need to be with him to the end. He goes, he's already gone. You can't unsee those things. And this is not your place. He this I'm being your dad. And I'm just like,

Victoria Volk: And I

Carolina Sotomayor: was like, okay. Because nobody you can't unsee those things. Like, I had changed his diaper and I had fed him and I was making all of his phone calls and all of his demands and running all of his errands during the time that he was awake. And it was very messy and it was very angry. I'm so grateful that I didn't see that because, like, I feel like during those moments, I was so blessed by these two caring people who were really looking out for me. So when there was so much against me with my siblings and I was a naive, thirty year old who was just trying to take care of her dad who had no idea what the hell she was doing. So I think a

Victoria Volk: lot of this experience taught you how you needed to be loved.

Carolina Sotomayor: Oh, yeah. It is a huge reason why it's a huge reason of why I live my life now. Like, I live intentionally slower. We live a very simple life because it allows us to have a more regulated nervous system. When I'm more when your my nervous system is more regulated, I have more capacity or emotions and to be careful and mindful of how I want to love myself and others. Because that takes effort because it's very easy for me to default to angry, controlling, yelling. I think it takes more effort to not do those things when you are ingrained DNA coded trauma lived to resist those responses until those responses are no longer an urge or the reactiveness. It I may spend the rest of my life resisting those urges or even, like, you know, hitting, wanting to hit. You know, I that not like, because I was hit. Like, that's you don't know until you're in those situations, like, when you're treated, you take so much effort to undo. And because my husband comes from such a different background, it's a lot of conversation. So I have learned, like, what are my triggers? And what that allows me? What do I need to stay in this embodiment of a life that I want? What are the absolute non negotiables that I must have to exist so that I can love myself. I can live in a state of being. And it's taken a lot of, like, trial and error and a lot of discussions and a lot of commitment to I am worth this. I am worth the effort. So it's not just like, I'm gonna choose to be happy. I'm gonna choose not gonna be angry. No. It's also like decluttering their house and making sure their systems and that I have a ritual in place. Like, so when I am triggered, I we have safe words and safe words are, you know, for a place where my kiddo has one and that that's, like, and immediate. Okay. Let's go have a talk. Do you wanna leave? And it's just, like and then it's, like, they're my husband and I have a say, there's the reason why there's two of us. I'm, like, I can't type out. I'm tapped out. And they're, like, we have words for that to, like so it's just an immediate, like, attention grabber and and it's because I love myself enough that I don't have to suffer and I don't have to endure. And that I can my life can be full of love and I can't give my son that different life.

Victoria Volk: What I hear you saying is that communication

Carolina Sotomayor: is huge. We overcommunicate We I think over communication in our marriage has been very good. Very It's been really helpful. I think I've undiagnosed ADHD. So he reminds me of a lot of things we put things in a family calendar. I think that active listening and over communication has been really healing too because it's being because I feel like that means you can be feel seen, heard, appreciated, valued. When I feel hurt, I feel safe. It creates a lot of peace knowing what to expect when he's gonna go into the office or when I need to boot pick up or when he has flag football or soccer or when I'm gonna be doing a Ricky call. I have find a lot of safety in my marriage, and it's been really I think when I think if I have helped lived over many lifetimes, it's probably one of the greatest things that's ever happened to me.

Victoria Volk: I'm happy for you.

Carolina Sotomayor: Thank you. He is he's made me feel safe at the very beginning of her marriage. I think the first thing was I felt safe to be myself fully with him and that's been the launching pad from there.

Victoria Volk: And that's a great mention too. And I think, you know, aside from all of the things you just said about over communication and boundaries and safe words and systems, it's a self awareness of of who you are Mhmm. And what you need. Yes. But more so who you are at the core of who you are? Like, who so many of us, I think, we walk through our life, like, who am I? And we can search our entire lifetimes, go to our deathbeds, not really be asking that.

Carolina Sotomayor: I feel like my dad did that. He didn't know. I I it's what I feel. Anything that's I think I relate that to emotional availability and vulnerability is, like, their any resistance to that is a lack of is also a resistance to know or have awareness. Because if you can't feel what are you telling clients, if you can't know what you're feeling, You can't tell me what you need for your next step. I don't care what you want. I need to know what you need first before we get to the want. Can't run before we we can't crawl or walk. Like, if you can't tell me I because it's different energy versus, like, I think I need this versus I feel I need because then those are two different parts of your body and two different depths. Versus, like, first layers, I think I need a hug or I feel I need you to to hug me and hold me.
It's two different things. And then the receipt of that is gonna be different. If you were to receive what you asked for. The impact will be different. In my opinion,

Victoria Volk: I was listening to a podcast the other day, and It was it was about, like, manifestation and energy and and money and things like that. But you can apply, again, energy is a currency. Right? And everything is energy. Everything is energy. And it's like this what comes to my mind now as we're talking and having this conversation is, what do you have the capacity? What do you have the energetic? What can you energetically hold in your tank? Because we can have this you know, if we're at an energetic place in our lives where we it's like one thing after another, like this snowball effect of this this relationship going bad or credit card debt. It's like so many things happen simultaneously in all areas or various areas of our lives and we don't connect the dots that we are the common denominator. And it's like, if you only have again, it comes back to the energy. If your energy is currency and you you're putting it in all these unhealthy or unsupported whip things, that's what you have energetic currency for. You're not gonna have room to let anything else in if it's all going out. And I think that relates to healing too. It's like if if you're looking at your life energetically.
Like, it's just I'm just gonna suffer. It's just I have a life. I'm just meant for a life of suffering because I believe that at one time in my life.

Carolina Sotomayor: Which is this the way life is? That's what I'm saying. You're gonna see the way they're

Victoria Volk: suffering. Yeah.

Carolina Sotomayor: And they she really believes that.

Victoria Volk: You That's that that is the energy you walk the world with that you're walking life with, and you're bringing that to everything.

Carolina Sotomayor: And she goes, you're so lucky. She said, no, I have made choices. And she goes, I don't get that. I said, she goes, you're so lucky to have a man like Ryan, or my husband's hiding in him consciously. So lucky to have a husband like yours. Your dad x y z and like stop. He's dead. You've been divorced my entire life. When is the dead horse gonna be beaten enough? Like like I need a choice to marry a healthy man based on our healthy relationship. He's a whole person. He's not he's not an abuser. I made that choice. Yes, am I blessed to to have this, but I made that choice consciously. You know? I don't know. I I don't I get That's for it. Yeah. I did the work. Like, I was the happiest at that point in my life I had ever been when I met him. And he also said that he knew that when by dating me and marrying me his life would ever be boring.

Victoria Volk: That's what I say about my husband.

Carolina Sotomayor: And I tell everyone if the a member, his mom asked me he could she goes, why do you want to marry? Him. And I said, is that you know that no one's ever gonna love me any better than him. He is everything. And I there's not enough time I never there's I never have enough time with him. I soak up I still love going on dates with him. Like, they'd say it's the best. Like, I same Steven says that she goes, I love how good or friends you are. You generally enjoy your husband's company, never called my husband a man child, or he's my first child, and I would have never married him. But I never get enough time with him.
And I had dated and engaged before. I've never married before, but that's how I knew. Like, this one's the one for me. Yeah.

Victoria Volk: You had said, on your website, you have a a part that says, your dad's death in reference to your dad's death, that it changed me, and it woke me up. In what way, do you feel like it changed you? And were you asleep in your life? Like, the the Carolina before and the Carolina after his death, how would you sum those two people up? Because death does change us.

Carolina Sotomayor: I I've thought about this before, and deep deep reflection are a couple of things. My dad's dad's death was a hundred percent the start of my spiritual awakening. I had been a faith girl. I had been a Christian girl. I had been a churchgoer. But because of his death, I was spiritually curious. I had believed in I have seen ghost. I have expelled I I even felt ghost in an energy in his house where, like, this stereo, if I fell asleep on the couch, it would turn on in blast static sound. It was awful. So his house was definitely haunted. My mom's trailer had was haunted. So I had already had the basis of feeling like there was more after you die. I definitely believed in the afterlife in the spiritual realm. I'd never I'm into a cup in in Miami, you can go to Santa Yeah. It's very real. So which is like, are are very prevalent. You can find them. I have been to a witch before. Usually, if you're in a Cuban neighborhood, so you if you need They call it a bad news. Like, if you need a bath or, like, a spell, everyone's at least gone once. So when you're, like, early twenties or in your teenagers, you do stuff. So I had been to and I was, like, oh, shit's real. So I had a little bit of a curiosity with that. So when he died, I was very curious to know what happened to them. And I was like, he can't just not exist anymore. My love for him so strong. His love for me just does not exist. I don't believe that. Because I've had dreams, like, of my Ebola who had died. And I was like, this can't be the end. Like, my dad believed ashes to ashes, dirt to dirt. Like, he really believed nothing. And I was like, I was like, okay. Like, he didn't really care where his ashes ended up. Like, his ashes are at my feet. They're under they're in his arm. Like, I keep it under my desk. I I move it around. Anyway, I started taking classes with the psychic, the local psychic, she offered like spirit guides, aliens, she would teach about Guardian angels, how to talk to people who have passed, Oracle cards. And I was starting to take these classes. And then I got a reading from her right before her wedding. I got my dad died in April. We got engaged in September. We got married in December. Of that year. So from the time that he proposed to the time we got married, it was very fast. It was ninety days. Just because we we wanted to be married. And right before our wedding, I got the reading. It was Thanksgiving time frame. And she she just said there would be certain things that would happen on our wedding day because my biggest my biggest sadness going into the wedding or my biggest grief was that he wasn't gonna walk me down the aisle. And the wedding wedding was beautiful and there were certain things that happened that day that we that she said his presence would be known and there's still things that happen that we don't know. Like, there was a medallion placed that several people commented on on this table on the beach where we had poured the sand and the fishy and stood in the passers stood in front of. I didn't see it. It's not in any of the photos. But several guests had plummeted on it. My cousin goes, did you see that medallion that was on there? Did you where did that come from? And was like, are you talking? I never saw it.
It's not in any of the pictures. For several people, Anodeon are like, what was that medallion? What was that was that a coin? I was like, I have no idea, but that was on the table in front of everyone. And there was only, like, twenty five thirty people at the the ceremony. So that was one thing. The sky was perfectly blue. And with white clouds and we got married in front of the lighthouse, he used to take us all too. He took them when he was married and then he took me. So this is a special place for us and we got married there in a way to honor him.
But my spiritual weight keying was just so that I could talk to him. So all this exploration, all these workshops, all of these psychic readings, was for me continued to hear from him. Didn't I a hard time coping not talking to him? So I thought if I became a spiritual medium and I believed when someone said, like, everyone's a psychic, you just turn it off. I was like, well, okay, let me start taking this seriously and it was I started to have experiences with him. Like, I would feel I I would have certain moments that this is before the horse fall, and this is before I had two horses. This is before the first horse died. I would go to the barn and I would cry on her. And it was during usually these drives on these gravel roads that I would have these experiences. I remember my right leg my right thigh got very cold, and I was sobbing. I know I'd play different songs to make me think of him. And I was just like, I just miss you. I just I don't understand why this is my life now without you. And I would just go to the barn and I would cry. I would just stand and cry in my horse. She was everything to me and it was through that connection that idea experiences, little things like that. And then I started to smell him climbing up my apartment stairs. And I took a workshop on clear abilities and which is like clear cognizant. Clear sentence, clear audience, like, you can hear things, vision, you can see things, symbols. I started learning about angel numbers, and it started playing weird things like my girl was our song. And it would be I'd be walking through the office, and then I would just hear my girl playing. And it would just be, like, just little things that he would send me and was, like, okay, there's something to this. So then I started getting repeated. I would hear that often and in rain in place because my girls are very specific. Mhmm. Song would hear it at Walmart on the speaker or it'd be somebody's ring tone or it would play on my on my radio in the car. My new this is twenty twelve. So this is this is twenty fourteen. So it's a very different time than, like, I I still listen to the radio and stuff versus, like, Spotify now. But then I I started to I got Reiki Attuned. And with every Reiki Attunement, my mediumship, my ability to channel got deeper and stronger. And when I started to use Oracle cards, I could start to channel with him. I started intuitively journaling, and he would show up in every medium I would try. So it wasn't just straight senses of clear abilities and symbols. It was also using, like, my dad had a very specific b o. So, like, it was old spice and old man smell. Mhmm. So, like, when I smelled that, I was climbing up the apartment stairs that I had just moved into, and it was just, like, And I was like in the light flickered. I was like, okay. So now I have learned to believe occurrences. So and I can feel him when he's around and when he's not around. He's not always around. So that my dad's death led me to stretch me to believe that I was possible to I did a desire to wanna communicate with them, which meant I need to become a medium, which then let me to channel spirit babies I am doing now. I believe that because of his my desire to continue to talk to him, is what led me into my ability to channel. Because then when I started to channel professionally in paid sessions, I could talk to other loved ones. I could and then it and then I was in Ricky Sessions. I was working with moms who've lost babies. And they were grieving the losses of stillborn or medically terminated or a topic or a chemical pregnancy or a failed fertility treatment or an embryo transfer that didn't work out. Connecting to those babies was the end result. Mhmm. What what Carolina was before my dad's death? She was a she was a she was a lot more carefree. She was a lot she was a lot lighter, meaning, like, or a a blue yes. A lot more care free. I was a less healed, less considerate. I was very caring, but I was not as careful as I am. I'm very not self aware as I am now, obviously. But I also didn't have a relationship with healing other than talk therapy And I was very much stuck in a dysregulated nervous system seeking everyone else's approval to get validated. And had no self love and no self confidence. Everything was if I work hard, I'll work harder, and then that's how I got stuff. There was no there was not much self relationship other than work hard. Do what people tell you. Honestly, we'll get you far, Ray. And try to have some fun sprinkled in. So I I I think I'm probably cutting myself short a little bit, but now it's it's a lot more I feel like just it's just lightened day. I'm I can generally say I'm happy most of the time. And I love who I am. I love the life I'm living versus before I took a job because it was my first big girl job after graduating. I graduated twenty nine and got jobs early after, moved from Florida to Nebraska, didn't know anyone. And it was because I wanted to start over, but I think she was strong.
But just didn't have a lot of self awareness or a lot of love for herself.

Victoria Volk: I think what sums up what you just shared is if you wanna heal, Get to know yourself.

Carolina Sotomayor: It's true. Yourself.

Victoria Volk: Right?

Carolina Sotomayor: I'm sorry. That was pretty long winded.

Victoria Volk: No. It's beautiful. That's what I hear in what all that you shared. And even just my personal experience, it's like, if we give ourselves the time and attention, like, really, it's our inner child. Right?

Carolina Sotomayor: It's yes. As an inner child, when I moved to Omaha, I didn't know anyone. So I was like, I I was so lonely, and they didn't wanna I'm not much of a drinker and all my coworkers, they drink because that's what you do in the Midwest. Mhmm. And that's where you meet people. Like, where do you get a boyfriend? Go to a bar. I can't hold my liquor. I'm such a lightweight. So I started making a bucket list and playing visitor in my city, and Omaha is a great city.
I love it so much. And I was like, I had ahead disposable income for the first time. And I was like, what am I gonna do with a little money? So I went on Craigslist. And I said, what is the thing that I always wanted to do? I was like, this is my guest season because I was so lonely. Like, I didn't know what to do because I was like, I wanna have some fun. So I found a trainer that was doing twenty five dollar horse lessons. And I would go because I wanted I always wanted a horse Like, I dreamt of horses. I would look up before I left Miami would look up how much horses cost?
How much could they how much does it cost to board? And I was like, that's a nonsense. I can't afford that. So then I I was like, and four twenty five dollar horse lessons. Well, three months in, I bought the horse less I bought the lesson horse.
And and she was the greatest thing that I had ever loved and the joke was the I love the horse more than my husband when we got married. It's my husband's still jokes because if she was still around, she would still outrank me. She was my hard horse. I knew it was Cheyenne. And that horse cared me for years, like, from, gosh, twenty twelve to twenty fourteen or twenty fifteen.
I loved her so much. She was amazing. And my inner child wanted a pony, wanted a horse so much. And I bought her. And she was in my engagement photos, like, and so lying about it. Like, the vet became a good friend to my husband and I, and he goes, I'm sorry to tell you this. It was kinda hurtful. He goes, I think you killed your horse. And I was like, I didn't I don't know what you're talking about. He goes, you cried so much on her. Her she ended up having asthma and she couldn't eat and breathe. At this like, she couldn't eat and breathe at the same time in no matter for several months of steroids and treatment, her quality of life wasn't very good anymore, and we just couldn't and her cough was so bad. We the vets said the most humane thing was to put her down. So that was the hardest thing ever, but she so grieving her that the first two years of her marriage were shitty. And we I was I don't remember a lot other than those moments. Like, my dad died. We got engaged. We got married. We settled the state. My horse died.
That was the order in which things happen. And we were trying to help, baby. And, you know, things, you know, you

Victoria Volk: didn't have the energetic capacity for a baby.

Carolina Sotomayor: No, I didn't. No. But with my horse dying, I think that was even harder. I think the I have it when I think about the grief, the grief from the court case of this this date settlement was harder than actually losing my dad, fighting with them. But the grief of losing my horse oh, god. Because she carried me, and it was it was my it was like a child to me. And having a relationship with a horse and riding them and training them and caring for them, especially if they're sick and it's your first horse. An animal that large, it's and I have dogs now and I've had cats. It's very different than relationship with dogs because it's it's very dangerous sport. It's a lot of trust building, a lot of there's a lot of energy that goes into a horse person relationship.
So, greeting her was really hard.

Victoria Volk: They say that emotionally, horses are the most similar to humans, emotionally.

Carolina Sotomayor: I quit horses. I I still had the second horse, but he was a butthole, and he was too much horse for me. And whereas the first horse, she made me overly confident, but she really was such a good horse he made up for my incompetence. And so the second one, we had a love hate relationship. But he ended up hurting his leg and he had to be put down too in twenty seventeen.
Yeah. So he had him for a while, but he was so old. I couldn't he just became a lawn ornament. So I gave him treats. He was he was so ornury. I loved him, but I hated him. He was it wasn't the same. And I was kinda resentful after she died. I was like, I'm stuck with you. So isn't it like

Victoria Volk: seeing how you described your dad? You didn't say the word ornery, but you said stubborn.

Carolina Sotomayor: Does that No. It's transcribing my horse.

Victoria Volk: Right? But that's how you described your dad. Like, not ordinary, but you meant describe

Carolina Sotomayor: Oh, my dad was ordinary.

Victoria Volk: Oh, my

Carolina Sotomayor: dad was stubborn. Yeah. But this horse was, like, he was, like, the one of my bad boyfriends. Like, he was so good looking. Like, he was so gorgeous that as soon as you're about to get over him, he'll do something really nice. But then, like, a little bit later, he'll turn around and do something really shitty. So, like, he would do things like bite me or, like, I'm grooming him or I'm I'm cinching up the the saddle to ride. He'd come around and try to bite me and or he would nip me. Like, he just loved to bite me. And I was like, why you?
Or, like, he'd push me and I'd fall down. He was sixteen hands high. He was huge.

Victoria Volk: Maybe he was never taught how to be gentle. You know what I mean?

Carolina Sotomayor: He picked on me. He was perfect for other people.

Victoria Volk: The bully. Oh.

Carolina Sotomayor: Other people would write them that were more like, I was a novice and that were, like, good writers and are born. They're, like, oh my god, he's such a good boy, or he would fake trip to, like, scare me while we were trail riding. And then he would just, like, look at me. Like, he hated my husband, so he stepped on my husband's foot, and he looked at me while he was doing it and pricing his foot down. I yeah. No. Like, his name was Bucks Mosipi, and you. Absolutely.

Victoria Volk: Well, you know, we meet assholes in our in our human relationships. I guess we meet them in the animal world too. Right?

Carolina Sotomayor: Yes. It was like but he loves treats.

Victoria Volk: My youngest, we just watched a video just the other day of her. She must have been maybe three. I say around three years old, three or four. And my I had asked her on the video. I said, what do you wanna view when you grow up?
And she said, a vet. Wait. I wanna be a cow girl. And she has wanted a horse and dreamt of horses and horse, horse, horse, horse, horse, since she was eighty bitty. And so I imagine one day she'll be just like you and have her own horse, and she's actually planning to go to vet school. So she's a sophomore in high school and she wants to be a vet, and she's still pursued. She's going to pursue that. So

Carolina Sotomayor: good for her. I think,

Victoria Volk: doubt she'll have a horse.

Carolina Sotomayor: I would if I if I could have the first horse again, I would do horses again. Yeah. But because because of gotten the garter questions, like, you're gonna get another horse? No. Nebraska winners could be brutal.
And we boarded they have a shelter, but they're best if they're in a herd. So not like stalled. So our horses would have a barn that they could fully go into as a herd, and then they would also have free access to go out. Like, but having I had older horses, they required extra care and not just, like, shots and floating their teeth and all that. Like, they need to be blindkicked. That's very controversial. But, like, to keep weight on, to keep all those things. And in Nebraska, you can have three or four seasons on a day. And, like, depending on our winners, you can we've had winners where it would snow, but then it would get really warm. And if they sweat underneath their blanket, it's bad. Like, and it could ruin their code and all of these things. So, like, to go out there, put the blanket on, take it off again, and it and it'd be in cold and, like, also be are you close enough to the barn? I just don't wanna do that anymore. But if we had the first horse, guarantee you would be still a poor girl. But if it was for the second, the second one ruined me. And then this finally had one kid. Like, I was like, this this pregnancy, this birth, this is for is is was really rough. I don't wanna do this again. And we we pretick, we had talked about only having one kid, but I was like, if it's anything like the horses, I don't wanna gamble this, bro. I don't I we're good. We're good. We have three dogs. We're good. I have three dogs.

Victoria Volk: Brings up a question for me. I'm glad you mentioned that because you essentially grew up as an only child.

Carolina Sotomayor: Oh, yeah.

Victoria Volk: So, what does that bring up for you as your son being an only child?

Carolina Sotomayor: Oh, god. He would give anything to have a sibling. He asked he asked if we could adopt, if we could foster, we talked about those. We were very open, and I was like, listen. The fact I literally I literally said it was, like, my ability to have a baby, this factory is closed. Was very difficult to achieve you. And he goes, why can't you just go save a baby? I was like, it doesn't work that way. I was like, we had to to talk about, like, you know, that it costs a lot of money to adopt, to foster. And I was like, we really like the way our family is now.
And then I was like, so, like, really trying to understand his need for a sibling. Essentially, he wants to belong. He wants someone that's like him. He wants So what we have done to mitigate that is we've made extra efforts to my husband has a brother and we do I will move mountains to even it's first for a day, we live in different states. So, aren't my in laws live in Kansas now that used to live here?
So, they live in Wichita and my brother-in-law lives in Fort Worth. So, if there I will move efforts so that he can have cousin time, visits to to to get that sibling time that's as close as possible. But my husband, he was very adamant coming into our marriage, so he only wanted child. And I was like, I think I would want one or two. Let's see how it goes with one. And then as we had went through everything, he very much wanted to only have one child. And he's like, you've had a really bad child experience like sibling experiences. He has his own he had a very good childhood, but he has his own feelings about certain topics. So for his purpose, like, we discussed, and he's, like, we both decided collectively just one child, but I am in strong opinion. Our son will probably have, like, seven or eight children.
He loves babies. He he's already told me he wants to be a dad and he goes, when I I have a family, he's already thinking about it. I think it's because we talk about babies all the time and people having babies because of what I do. We got another Ricky baby. They're and and I had to describe, like, IVF is they have to have surgery sometimes to have the baby. Babies are made different ways. And he's like, well, when I'm seventeen, I'm gonna have a family. I'm gonna be a dad. I was like, let's wait a little bit longer. He told me that two days ago, because when I said it to you, he wants to be a dad. Do you have college to be a dad? No. No.

Victoria Volk: You go through college as you're being a dad. I swear to say good. That's about diversity you never get out of.

Carolina Sotomayor: But I think I I am actively working on being more I think I have a good I think as an adult, sometimes it can be really hard to be a kid again, but I think as a parent of an intentionally only child, you have to be their plainly at times. And I watched a creator in TikTok say that he was an only child in the consequences and how lonely it was. So I only became aware of this because he is now older. I mean, he's still very young, but I am actively trying my like, over the past month, I realized, like, he he told me he at the end of summer, he was on pretty lonely, jam packing, late dates, grading community, community was really important to us, but, like, having regular play dates with the same people, so there's more of a kinship there. I think it's gonna be the best I can do.
We have three dogs. I hope that I hope that helps him.

Victoria Volk: And to help him, you know, we need a community, right, as adults. Like, we

Carolina Sotomayor: Right.

Victoria Volk: Driving community, and kids are no different. So it's helping him find his people.

Carolina Sotomayor: Yeah. I I noticed that we tried Yeah. We tried soccer for the first time in the spring as an invitation from a preschool friend and to continue that relationship. And I was like, oh my gosh. Look how much more productive we are in a Saturday. Look, we made I made a friend who doesn't even speak English, should we share the same name? She's from Ukraine. And I learned to use Google translate, and our world exploded in the best ways with, like, new connection. So I think understanding the need for him to feel like he belongs somewhere is what I think it is and that he is he has a connection with someone. So me actively working on that part. Mhmm. I think will kind of

Victoria Volk: enrich his life.

Carolina Sotomayor: Yeah. In a so we may not be able to do this, but I am like, he may not understand the emotional you need is. You wanna feel connected. You wanna feel like you belong. You wanna feel like you have something with someone.
And I'm creating that in different spots. So it's not all in one pot too. That's very strategic. So if, like, something goes south with school friends, he still has sport friends and he still has plate eight friends that are all not in the same bucket.

Victoria Volk: Yeah. My youngest too, she just had someone some a family moved here and now they're they're all about the horses together and, you know, they share the same interest and she's phoned. You know, she was struggling, I think, for a while there to try and find somebody that had the same similar interest, you know, as her and

Carolina Sotomayor: They can do wonders. He's relating to Pokemon. Yeah.

Victoria Volk: Yeah. Even coming out of their shell more so.

Carolina Sotomayor: Yeah. We have he made a friend in his class, and he's also into Pokemon. And he has a special he needs special attention throughout the day. And Ollie has sought him out, and he goes, I like being his friend because he needs me. And he also likes Pokemon. And as So we've done play dates with this kid, and he is so so sweet. And I've seen Ollie just light up, oh, my turn on scene dates, but I've seen my son light up so much because of the shared interest and the depth of, like, Do you have this card? Do you have do you have the evolve form so much? I know so much about Pokemon. But, you know, and it's just I they just light up different than another like, is it something that they really care about?

Victoria Volk: Well, I'm gonna tell you something. My son would probably hate me for mentioning this on a podcast, but he's into Pokemon. Helly. He's nineteen.

Carolina Sotomayor: You be surprised. I looked up there's a lot of grown adults who do it post a month ago. And we're learning to battle. I'm not really sure. I'm I'm trying to get people to answer my questions on, like, how to build a deck so he can go to one of the tournaments. And their their website doesn't work. Oh, goodness. I'm in a Facebook group with grown men. Really?

Victoria Volk: But I mean, it's like and he's been collecting these since he was a kid. So he's nineteen. So

Carolina Sotomayor: It's like,

Victoria Volk: well, like, plus years, ten years. For sure, ten plus years, he's got a lot of cards. And he'll show me the ones he's really proud of and what they're he's been looking up, how much they're worth, and so he's you know, he's got quite the collection.

Carolina Sotomayor: He goes to trading events as far as we've gotten, but we have three binders, and I've organized them by Yuval formed with him. And down the street, he had a there was a little bully down the street. And he kept saying how much he has, like, these v stars. And I'm like, what's a v star Ollie? What is that? He goes, oh, so and so says that he have ten and I only have two. And I was like and he said it's a mean things to me. I was like, Let's go on eBay. And I'm a spiteful human. And I I bought I was like, is this one good?
I was like, we can't spend, like, twenty dollars on a card, but we can spend a couple dollars on a card. And I ordered I ordered like I'm not kidding you. Fourteen or fifteen. I ordered so many VStar's so that the next time they battled, he had just two pages full of v stars. And I was like, you go to show that little kid.
How many v stars you have? But it was not my finest parenting moment, but I was like, you you wanted like, in my instance, like, you're taking this a little too far. I was like, no. It keeps going down. All you came home crying and I was like, no.

Victoria Volk: Not having this.

Carolina Sotomayor: Not having this. We will we will be victorious every day because they came for anyway, drive, like, in these little white envelopes. So excited to go get the mail. Yes.

Victoria Volk: My son loves it too, getting the mystery packs. Oh. It's like Christmas. You know, you never know.

Carolina Sotomayor: Have you watched a livestream of those?

Victoria Volk: I'm sure he has. He's like the

Carolina Sotomayor: only guy we have. We've gone in TikTok and we've watched these people unbox stuff. Wild.

Victoria Volk: It's yeah. There's you know, just like Ricky, you know, it's like kind of feel like unicorn sometimes when you're into the energy work and especially probably in the Midwest. You know, that's I'm glad, you know, we kinda talked about that. But being in the Midwest, it's not something we're not as, like, progressive. Right? So do you did you ever feel like you know, like, it's, like, grown man adults who love Pokemon. They're probably kind of in the closet a little bit. It's, like, didn't you ever feel like that? Like, when you first, like, really got a little awkward. You were

Carolina Sotomayor: especially when I was still working corporate. I quit corporate about three years ago, three and a half years ago. So I did I've done I've been doing Ricky for seven years, and it was something I was really proud of, but also, like, really skurdish because I had also lost a lot of people who told me I was doing the devil's work. Mhmm. So I was really kind of, like, in the closet about it because of how people reacted. But now there's, like, a huge move movement. There's a lot of spiritual practitioners in Omaha that are very open, and now it's, like, fun to manifest. But it wasn't like that in twenty seventeen. Like, if you use the pendulum, we were gonna hell. And I I my best friend, actually, last August, we went to visit her last July. So last August, she said, I'm really scared for your soul. You're going straight to hell. I'm like, dude, this is not new. Like, you know, I've been doing this forever. But I was like, okay.
And she's like, well, you're not gonna you're gonna stop it? Or do you wanna be my best friend? So it's like, bro, even I don't know I'm used since I was twenty. If you're not into this, that's okay. I'll love you from afar, but we don't, you know, I'm not I don't believe in hell. I just believe in the other side. But if you think that's what's happening to me, then you don't have to be a part of this show. You don't have to be part of this party. And we parted. So for me, now I it took me a long time to really be, like, yeah, I'm a psychic medium. But it took, I think, time. It took years for me to be, like, get over those losses and, like, for me to stand strong. I'm like like, this is my life purpose. And I think I just needed proven evidence over time and time and time again, you know, when and to make like, to have, I think, the more legitimate I've I've really proven myself as into, like, my branding, my marketing, like, just it made me feel more legitimate. Mhmm. And when I switched from in person to online right before COVID happened, I quit seeing people in person. I I got more confident. I was like, Omaha is too small for me. I think that's also why I went online. Was this like, there's only so many people who are open to this and I feel like if I go online, I'll find more people I'm meant for the world. That's what I told myself. And essentially, that's essentially what's happened. I started the podcast and I've met so many people. And I we have eighteen thousand followers on TikTok, and we're globally ranked every day with our podcast that make me be behind a podcast. So I don't hide anymore. Like, either you like me, and I'm not gonna convince you, either I'm like, here here's a FAQ question. If you wanna go look what it is, great. But I don't convince anyone that they should do this. If you're curious, I'll talk to you. But that's not my mission to convince you to do this.
And if you're curious, I'll I'll have a conversation with you, but I'm not gonna convince you to do anything. That's not my problem. It's not my job, not my circus, not my monkeys. It's certainly not gonna own that problem.

Victoria Volk: And if you are curious, it's probably the universe, like, knocking you on the head. Yeah.

Carolina Sotomayor: I looked curious.

Victoria Volk: Called me too. Like, I kept hearing rapey, rapey, rapey, you know. What's this rapey? I bought in the night. Went through rapey one and two and then I got my rapey master and then I went through corona, holy fireakey, and so that's What do you

Carolina Sotomayor: think of holy fire corona? I love that that one changed my life, the corona. Mhmm. I like that one. And I did I did I want him to I was I was like a needle jut. I mean, the professional certification. So I took it with a licensed Yeah. I see our t teacher. I need that certificate. That level of certificate.
I couldn't be, like, regular person.

Victoria Volk: Oh, I didn't go through the licensing, but I was trained, like, my racking master teacher was one of thirty licensed rate emails. Yeah.

Carolina Sotomayor: No. That's who you went like, so you can get, like, this special certificate. That's what I really, really wanted. Yeah.

Victoria Volk: Yeah. It was my Reiki I think it was my Reiki too. I had a really profound experience and that kind of, like, solidified the deal for me for my healing personal healing.

Carolina Sotomayor: Yeah.

Victoria Volk: Then I went into biofuel tuning. So now I use tuning force.

Carolina Sotomayor: Really? Oh, I've never played with tuning forks.

Victoria Volk: My friend, that is for me, personally, in my opinion, it's more bang for your buck.

Carolina Sotomayor: It Oh. Tell me more.

Victoria Volk: It is it it is really deep. It's it really matches the energy work that I want to be doing with people to help people really move through stuff because it's it yeah. Biofil tuning.

Carolina Sotomayor: Oh, we're gonna have to check after this. Yes. I

Victoria Volk: would love to. But, yeah, it's that has been

Carolina Sotomayor: you should come in my podcast.

Victoria Volk: I would love to. I would love to. Jazzy. Good. So, yeah, it's enabled me to do the work that I do with Grievers and, you know, I know what's not mine?
You know? And I didn't know that in the beginning, especially, and I'm maybe

Carolina Sotomayor: really hard to decipher.

Victoria Volk: It is. It's like, oh,

Carolina Sotomayor: what am I feeling as this comes up? Yeah.

Victoria Volk: Yeah. And I was like, wait a minute. I'm not I got a clear my stuff

Carolina Sotomayor: a hundred percent.

Victoria Volk: Mhmm. Yeah. It's energy work has enabled me to do the work that I do with with grief and talking to Grievers and, you know, because people

Carolina Sotomayor: move it out

Victoria Volk: of pressing. That's so depressing.

Carolina Sotomayor: And I'm

Victoria Volk: like, grief is my jam. Like, it I could talk about it all the live long day. I never lived part of it.

Carolina Sotomayor: Yeah. I hear stories of loss. I worked with a person yesterday who did a termination at twenty five weeks, which is really difficult to go for a person to go through. My husband's like, are you okay? I'm like, yeah.
Just gonna make my decaf. And I was like, it it just becomes I was like, I can hold space for a lot because I've gone through a lot, but I also can appreciate her pain. Mhmm. I can see, like, I can hold space for it because but it's not my story. I've done, like, enough it's I've had enough practice to hold it apart from me and also no big grounded going into it and then cleanse after. Understand what I'm feeling is enough practice of know who's talking to me when I'm in the session. Mhmm. I have a question. Have you I have you ever gotten a tune to another lineage of Ricky or only Holy Fire?

Victoria Volk: Only Holy Fire.

Carolina Sotomayor: I got a tune to Crystal Ricky, and then I got certified in Ricky for childbirth.

Victoria Volk: Mhmm.

Carolina Sotomayor: And then I when I what I've settled on, it was kundalini Ricky. I found this woman and corporate

Victoria Volk: I'm sorry, what? Does she she incorporates breath work?

Carolina Sotomayor: No. It's just basically there's a few different symbols with the kundalini Reiki. It's more potent and it's easier from, like, with my practice with I have traditional use to eat, reiki chris o Reiki, the Holy Fire, one two Ricky Master in Corona, and then I got and I did childbirth in there, and then I did Kundalini last. I did this two years ago. She does she doesn't teach, like, chakras, doesn't teach anything about cord cutting. She gives you the ultimate and gives you a packet. And it's was fifty bucks for every achievement, for the three achievements. And she does everything virtually over Zoom. And I found her in TikTok. And I had seen a video about Kundalini, and I became very interested in mother earth, like obsessed with her. And then the Kundalini awakening And I started to dive into I had a student and also a dear friend who I was training in Holy Fire Ricky Master. Mhmm. And And I and and then showing Charlie went on to Corona. And I was like, she's she was studying Sandskrit, and she was discussing, like, the true meanings of some of the words. And I was like and she's like, I don't feel very settled by this. And when we're having this discussion, I was like, well, I've been playing with Cunalini. Do you want didn't come over to my side? Do you want this? And we played with that together. And I just find it more organic. It's less like, I can get more done in a short amount of time. Like, I can do, like, a ten minute session and it feels like as if I done with corona for thirty. Mhmm. So it feels also just if Corona felt feminine and I still love corona, but if this feels like the most feminine for me, and it's just very, very simple. It doesn't have all the symbols, but it does have some symbols. But and it has different, like, DNA diving. It has this all these other things on the Reiki master, but that's what I mainly practice now. And it's I don't know. It feels sparkly. It feels it's it's just flows easier for me. It feels lighter when I'm done with the session too. Like, when I have when I have to, like, tense myself after a session and I feel lighter. It's not, like, it's easier for me to move through sessions if I have to do a start role a day. I'm less tired at the end of the day.

Victoria Volk: Sounds interesting.

Carolina Sotomayor: You should play together. Yeah. Sounds like forks. I'll tell you, like, clearly. Yeah.

Victoria Volk: We'll have to yeah. We'll have to connect after. And it's what's funny is that before we even started recording. We joked about this not being a two hour guest. It's

Carolina Sotomayor: a big two hours.

Victoria Volk: And here we are an hour and fifty seven minutes

Carolina Sotomayor: set up. That's funny.

Victoria Volk: So You are Oh, goodness. It's one o'clock, the longest podcast. And I've enjoyed every minute of

Carolina Sotomayor: it too.

Victoria Volk: I think it was we went to a lot of different places, and I you know, there's a lot of stuff on here. I haven't asked, but I think in a lot of ways, you answered for me. I mean, you kinda went into the medium and how you kinda came. Yeah. I think you answered all the questions I had.
And that switches to Zaro.

Carolina Sotomayor: It's not in my world.

Victoria Volk: But on the end with this, what gives you hope for the future?

Carolina Sotomayor: Or by future or just future in general.

Victoria Volk: It gives you hope for, I don't know, the collective however you wanna answer that, however you interpret that,

Carolina Sotomayor: that you can redeem yourself at any time. You can start over at any time. Last night, I I I let a circle a a boom activation inside a membership. And somebody and I said, what is the most fearless, most fertile version of you? What is she like? And somebody said that they smiled knowingly that they were having the redemptive pregnancy in birth. And I that word was so powerful for me for me, I cried and I got goosebumps. And I love that how many times I can always start over and that gives me hope that I have that and I like that I can always redeem myself because I love myself enough and I love unconditionally the people around me and I've learned to love unconditionally. And because of that, I can always apologize and start over. I could always forgive myself and I could always start over and do better and try again. Anything that has allowed me to have hope that if I make a mistake, I'll do better. I won't repeat it. And that gives me hope. And because that means I can always be better and without mistakes, I will not grow. And I have a firm belief that whatever I am, my dad taught me this because whatever you are is the baseline of what your children will be. He goes, so make sure you're really great. And I feel like I am doing what I was meant to do in this lifetime. And I hope if that is true that my son sees that, then I can only imagine what he's going to set intentions for to make the world a better place because he can always start over. Because he loves himself enough that he can forgive himself. If he has to forgive, he can grow and expand, he can redeem himself again. And you think starting over, it also feels very fresh and that's exciting. So when she like, and she I don't know if I would have answered that before yesterday. I think just being loved probably would have been being loved by my husband and my son would have been my answer before yesterday.

Victoria Volk: I can tell you what your answer was before yesterday.

Carolina Sotomayor: Oh, shit. Are you serious?

Victoria Volk: Yeah. Because I asked it on my form.

Carolina Sotomayor: Oh my god. It's so exciting.

Victoria Volk: If I can find it. When I think what would they really want for me in the the x situation, then I sit with that and proceed. It makes it easier to be fearless and go live the life I want. I think there's more, but your answer today was perfect. It was beautiful. And it sounds like the antidote for shame too.

Carolina Sotomayor: Yeah. Yeah. You'd always start over. I I didn't think a lot of people put like, if you have to start over, like, it's a like, it you don't have to start over all the way at a point x, you're just starting over where you're right now. Mhmm. So it's it's easier because you're you're at you're evolved. You're not starting over at the very beginning. You're starting evolved from a further point. I think people underrate how, how good it can be just start over. You can start over just by a new day or the first of the month or the first of the year.
I mean, that's why everyone does New Year's resolutions. Right?

Victoria Volk: Yes.

Carolina Sotomayor: You can start over mid afternoon or at one:thirteen in the afternoon. I love the thing that's really helpful.

Victoria Volk: Where can people reach you if they'd like to connect with you?

Carolina Sotomayor: I think Instagram is the easiest. My handle is the Carolina, like North and South, search my org, s o t o m a y o r. Or my website, caroline is it to my org dot com, or you can I think messaging and dimming me on Instagram is either you can follow me on TikTok and YouTube? We're pretty active on YouTube too. We're active on these things. Oh, my podcast. Yeah. Listen to the podcast. So forget about that one. Make a baby. Make a baby podcast. We are into making babies. We make babies with Reiki as our tagline. We're two years old, and we're close two. We're a little over six thousand downloads. So we're slow and steady. We're we would love for you to take a listen. We come out weekly at minimum. Sometimes, like, this week, we're doing in prompt two. We're gonna post every day. Because we're doing a healing challenge inside the membership. But, yeah, come and join us. Yeah. If you're with listers once, I can give you the link. They can try the membership out for three days for free if they want to come and join us.
You can try it out before deciding if they wanna stay or not.

Victoria Volk: Tesla on the link. I'll put that Yeah.

Carolina Sotomayor: I'll email it to you right away.

Victoria Volk: Yeah. Along with your contact information and

Carolina Sotomayor: Absolutely.

Victoria Volk: Thank you so much. I feel like this was a really I say it's a lot, but when this is what's so important to me with this podcast is to be able to give people the time in the space to Go Deep, to really share the story. To develop for me to develop a connection with you so that my listeners feel a connection with you. And I think that's so that's so important to me. And so thank you for coming to my podcast and True Ireland. And allowing me to sit with you through your stories.

Carolina Sotomayor: Thank you so much for for listening and having me.

Victoria Volk: And remember, when you unleash your heart, you unleash your life. Much love.


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