Energy Healing From Another Dimension: What Hillary Faye Taught Us About the Healing That Conventional Medicine Can't Reach

The Morning She Woke Up Speaking a Language She'd Never Learned

It was an ordinary morning in Toronto. Hillary Faye walked into her backyard, opened her mouth, and started speaking. Fluently. In a language she had never studied, never heard growing up, and couldn't identify.

She wasn't panicking. She had been warned the night before, at a diamond light body activation event, that this might happen. But being warned and actually living it are two very different things.

That morning was the beginning of 23 years of work that would eventually lead her to train over 5,000 energy healers worldwide, develop a healing system she calls the Arcturian Crystal Chambers, and become someone who describes contact with ninth-to-twelfth dimensional beings with the same casual confidence most people use to describe their morning coffee.

When Hillary walked into our conversation, we were ready to be fascinated. We were not quite ready for how difficult it would be to dismiss what she was saying.


We Came in Skeptical. We Left With Questions We Didn't Expect.

Talking to Hillary made us realize we had a quiet assumption going in: that a conversation about alien healers would feel fringe, vague, and easy to sort into the "interesting but not applicable" drawer. What we didn't expect was how grounded she'd be. How specific. How consistent.

We expected mysticism. We got a woman who spent her teens asking, with real urgency, how do I heal myself so I can keep living? That's not a spiritual origin story. That's a survival story. And it changed how we heard everything that came after.


So What Are Arcturian Crystal Chambers, Exactly?

Here's the short version, because Hillary spent years developing the long one.

The Arcturians, as Hillary describes them, are a collective of beings from the star Arcturus, operating at what she calls ninth-to-twelfth dimensional consciousness. For context, they are considered, in many metaphysical frameworks, among the most advanced civilizations in our galaxy. That's not Hillary's claim alone. Arcturus itself is one of the brightest stars visible from Earth, an orange giant in the constellation Boötes, and has been referenced in spiritual and extraterrestrial literature going back decades.

The Crystal Chambers are described as healing pods aboard Arcturian light ships, constructed not from physical material but from crystalline living light. Hillary teaches people to enter them, whether through guided astral projection or by receiving projected fields of light that she says can come directly to you, no out-of-body experience required. That last part mattered to us. Will has been trying to astral project for years. The idea that the healing could come to him was a genuine relief.

What do these chambers purportedly target? The nervous system, the endocrine system, and what Hillary calls the emotional trauma that conventional healing never reaches. Phantom symptoms. Hormonal dysregulation. The kind of stuck that doesn't move no matter how much therapy, supplements, or breathwork you throw at it.

Sound familiar? We thought it might.


The Science-Adjacent Corner: Why This Isn't as Wild as It Sounds

We're not here to make medical claims. Hillary isn't either, and she was careful to say so.

But here's what we do know from well-established research: the nervous system and the endocrine system are deeply intertwined. Chronic stress dysregulates cortisol, which disrupts hormonal balance across the board. Trauma, particularly early trauma, is now understood to be stored somatically, in the body itself, not just in memory. Bessel van der Kolk's landmark work, The Body Keeps the Score, established this in mainstream science. The idea that healing requires working at a level beneath conscious thought isn't fringe anymore. It's neuroscience.

What Hillary adds to that framework is a different delivery mechanism. Whether you call it energy healing, frequency medicine, or Arcturian light technology, the underlying logic, that some healing happens at a level conventional approaches don't access, isn't actually controversial. The source of that healing is where your mileage may vary.

We're not asking you to believe. We're asking you to stay curious.


The Cosmic Rose: Weirder Than It Sounds, More Useful Than You'd Think

Okay, the rose. We had to ask.

Hillary describes the Cosmic Rose as the highest-vibration tool in the energy healer's toolkit, a frequency rather than a physical object, originating from the Pleiades star system and used across multiple healing traditions for thousands of years. Her alchemy teacher called it "the workhorse of the energy tools." Hillary calls it a cosmic vacuum: when you imagine or call in a rose, its pure love frequency allegedly begins clearing energy that doesn't belong to you, including what you've unconsciously absorbed from other people, crowded spaces, and collective anxiety.

The practical application is simpler than the cosmology:

Try this right now. Close your eyes. Imagine a single rose in front of you. Pick the color that feels right. Ask it, silently or aloud, to vacuum out anything in your energy field that isn't yours. Breathe. See what shifts.

We're not telling you it's scientifically validated. We're telling you it's free, takes thirty seconds, and a surprising number of people find it works. Hillary has been using this technique for eighteen years. Her clients have been using it for almost as long. That's a lot of anecdotal data points.


"Does It Work If You Don't Believe It?" (We Asked. So Did You, Probably.)

This was Karen's question, and it's the right one.

Hillary's answer: openness matters more than belief. She's seen people with zero framework for extraterrestrial beings, no prior experience with energy healing, receive real benefit from the transmissions. What she cautions against is active resistance, coming in while actively focusing on it not working, because energy, she says, follows intention. If your entire attention is on the door being closed, you may not notice it opening somewhere else.

This tracks, actually, with what we know about the placebo effect and its more interesting cousin, the open-label placebo, where patients who are told they're receiving a placebo still experience measurable benefit. Expectation and openness are not the same thing. You can be skeptical and still receptive. That's kind of our whole brand.


3 Ways to Apply This Today (No Crystal Chambers Required)

1. Try the Rose Clearing. Once a day, especially after being around crowds, difficult conversations, or heavy news, imagine a rose and ask it to clear your field. It takes thirty seconds. Commit to a week. Notice what you notice.

2. Explore light language. Hillary mentioned that many people already carry these frequencies and simply haven't activated them. YouTube has dozens of light language transmissions available for free. Sit with one. You don't have to understand it. Let your nervous system respond or not respond, and observe without judgment.

3. Ask your body what it's carrying. Before bed, place one hand on your chest and one on your belly. Ask, out loud or silently, "What am I holding that isn't mine?" Don't force an answer. This is less a technique and more an invitation, a beginning of a conversation with the part of you that stores what your mind moves too fast to process.


The Big Picture

Here's what stayed with us after Hillary signed off.

Ten years ago, this conversation would have lived strictly on the fringes. Today, phrases like "nervous system regulation," "somatic healing," and "frequency medicine" are appearing in mainstream wellness spaces, academic research, and even some corners of integrative medicine. The vocabulary is shifting. The questions are getting bolder.

Hillary Faye has been at this for 23 years. She started not as a guru or a chosen messenger, but as a teenager who needed to figure out how to survive her own pain. That thread, the person who healed themselves first, who then couldn't help but share the tools, is one of the most human stories we've heard on this show.

We don't tell you what to believe. We open the door. What you walk through is entirely up to you.

But we'll say this: the healing that's eluded you might not be missing. It might just be operating on a frequency you haven't tuned into yet.

Listen to the full episode with Hillary Faye on The Skeptic Metaphysicians, available wherever you get your podcasts. And if this one moved something in you, share it with someone who's been quietly wondering the same things you have. That's how this community grows, one honest conversation at a time.

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