Star Child - Indigo Child - Highly Sensitive Child - Teens and Adolescents
Systems Busters - The Indigo Warriors by Celia Fenn
www.starchildglobal.com
The name “indigo Child”
refers to the soul color of Indigo, which indicates a Master Soul who serves as
a teacher or healer. Every Indigo Child will undertake this mission of teaching
or healing in some way, often merely by being who he or she is.
People who work with
Indigos prefer to call these children “kinesthetic learners”, and to suggest
that they need modes of learning suited to their energy levels, rather than
Ritalin.
Indigos have been coming
to our planet for a long time. Some argue that Jesus and Buddha were Indigos,
since their mission, on a global scale, was to teach and heal, and to shift the
consciousness of humanity.
In the recent past,
Indigos began to incarnate on the planet in increasing numbers after World War
II, in preparation for the global shift that we are now experiencing. They
incarnated among the “baby boom” generation of the fifties and were born to the
“flower children” of the sixties. However, at this stage there was not a
sufficient number of them on the planet to create significant changes.
Then, in the 1970s, the
first generational “wave” of Indigo Children arrived. These beings are now in
their late twenties and early thirties, and are the real “warrior” generation
who have begun the process of challenging and shifting old systems.
They were followed in
the eighties and nineties by Indigos of increasing sensitivity and refinement,
until the late 1990s and early 2000s when they were joined by the Crystal
Children, a different kind of spiritual warrior.
How to Recognize an Indigo
I am often asked in the course of my work how to recognize an Indigo. The obvious answer would be to check the aura color. But no, not all Indigos have dark blue auras all the time. The term “Indigo” refers to a soul state and not to an aura color, which in the average human changes from day to day depending on mood and interest. Clairvoyants who read soul states may be able to identify Indigos.However, it is easy to identify an Indigo by their sensitivity, creativity, spirituality and general behavioural patterns
.
How to Recognize an Indigo
I am often asked in the course of my work how to recognize an Indigo. The obvious answer would be to check the aura color. But no, not all Indigos have dark blue auras all the time. The term “Indigo” refers to a soul state and not to an aura color, which in the average human changes from day to day depending on mood and interest. Clairvoyants who read soul states may be able to identify Indigos.However, it is easy to identify an Indigo by their sensitivity, creativity, spirituality and general behavioural patterns
.
As children, they look
much like other children, although they are often physically beautiful with penetrating eyes. They are
always highly intelligent and full of questions and demands. They are energetic
and active and have strong wills and a strong sense of their own value and
importance. They know that they are special and that they are here to do
something significant.
They are right-brain oriented, and are generally attracted to right-brain pursuits such as music, art, writing and spirituality. They love crystals and reiki and meditation and yoga.
They are very passionate
and intensely loyal to their friends, of whom they often have many. They believe
in honesty and communication in relationships.
They are often baffled by dishonesty and manipulation and other forms
of selfish behaviour deemed normal by their elders.
Their attitude towards
money is either to reject it as unecessary or to be very aware of its power and
to seek, often successfully, to create affluence for themselves.
A key feature of Indigos is often anger. They will not be ordered around by so-called “authority figures”. On a deep level, Indigos do not recognize “authority”. They know we are all equal, and so they are enraged by those who assume authority and behave dictatorially, whether they are parents, teachers or bosses.
This where they are
important as teachers - they are teaching us to own our own power and to
respect ourselves, by not giving away our power to those who demand it. They
are teaching us further to value our creative and spiritual selves and not to
place so much value on material success.
The Indigo Child
The Indigo as child is active, energetic and imaginative. They can entertain themselves and play in their own worlds for hours. They often have imaginary friends, and they love fairies and dolphins.The boys often have more of a tendency towards hyperactive and disruptive behaviour. This is probably culturally determined by our society’s need to express male dominance, which is picked up by them at an early stage.
The Indigo Child
The Indigo as child is active, energetic and imaginative. They can entertain themselves and play in their own worlds for hours. They often have imaginary friends, and they love fairies and dolphins.The boys often have more of a tendency towards hyperactive and disruptive behaviour. This is probably culturally determined by our society’s need to express male dominance, which is picked up by them at an early stage.
The exceptional
intelligence of Indigos can be exasperating to adults. They will not be “told
what to do”, but will want to debate and negotiate every instruction. Until the
parent learns that they are being taught to respect the child’s right to
choice, and honor that choise, they will continue to be confronted at every
turn with power struggles and battles of will.
The correct way to handle an Indigo is to be willing to negotiate, explain, and offer choices. Bald instructions to “do as you are told” will only produce hostility or indifference.
Indigos often dislike school intensely. They are bored by the (to them) slow pace and repetitive tasks deemed suitable for children by teachers who do not understand their intelligence.
They battle with
authority and peer pressure, which can be quite overwhelming to a young Indigo
soul with little real understanding of the “power over others”, dominance and
submission states common to Earth society.
Problems experienced at school include ADD and ADHT, a result of boredom and irritation. Learning disabilities such as dyslexia often also reflect alternative ways of being and thinking used by Indigos.
The Indigo Adolescent
Like most adolescents, the Indigo will reach the state of puberty transition and become moody and inward as the body changes. However, at this stage, young Indigos often begin to see through the intense materialism and the victim dramas that form the basis of most adults lives in the modern world.At this point they often “disconnect” from these lifestyles and opt for “alternatives” which they deem more meaningful or more fun or just plain challenging to adults.
Unfortunately, many of these include the drug culture and various trance parties that include chemically induced states of bliss that are short-lived and addictive.
At this point, the adolescent is expressing his or her anger and rejection of a system that offers nothing of value to the Indigo soul. Parents can take their children to Rehabilitation programmes, but they really need to question why such intelligent and creative beings often seem to want to self-destruct.
Another form of self-destructive adolescent behaviour occurs when the child takes on the values of the parents and seeks to overachieve.
This can be frightening,
as Indigos are by nature exceptionally gifted and talented. These Indigos often
develop phenomenal academic and technical abilities to gain recognition and
success, but sacrifice emotional development which can be hugely damaging in
later life when they seek to create meaningful partnerships.
The Young Indigo Adult
The Young Indigo Adult
In their twenties and
early thirties, Indigos usually fall into one of two groups.The first group
follows a “yuppie” path and creates affluence, usually through a career in IT or
the Arts. They seek stable relationships and to have children and create
families. But they battle with the demands and norms of the systems of
marriage, family and employment. Their Indigo souls strive to express their
essence and remain true to who they are while still achieving “success” as
dictated by our culture.
The second group opts to
“drop out”, and often the individuals travel extensively, becoming a “global
citizen” and battling to settle in any one place. These people often have no
fixed career or work, and live an alternative lifestyle that includes drugs.
While they often claim to be happy, they are also frustrated by their inability
to be able economically to pursue the “normal” activities of creating a family
and contributing to a community.
Both groups are
attempting to redefine what it means to be an adult in the contemporary world,
and to find ways of living their truth while still finding happiness and
stability as adults. They are the generation that is defining new choices and
new options for adult life on the New Earth.
Systems Busting : Indigos and the Education System
Systems Busting : Indigos and the Education System
The area of communiyt
life where Indigos have had the most effect is the education system. As
mentioned earlier, Indigos are mostly right-brainers who are energetic and
active. They dislike sitting still for long periods, being told what to do and
being bored by repetitive tasks that fail to challenge them. Since this
generally defines the school experience, it is obvious that Indigos will have
problems and will cause problems.
The right-brain
orientation means many indigos struggle to maintain interest and focus in a
school curriculum designed for left-brain activity. Their need to express their
energy in movement and to relieve their boredom means they are restless and can
be disruptive. When they begin to
fall behind their peers, they can become stressed and anxious.
The usual diagnoses given to Indigos are ADD (Attention Deficit Disorder) and ADHT(attention Deficit Hyperactivty Disorder), which are regarded as “minimal brain disfunction” disorders by medicine. The parent needs to choose betweenn defining their child with a pathological label, or accepting that the child represents the next step in human evolution, and neither needs nor wants to spend 6 or 7 hours a day sitting behind a desk being told what to think.
Lets face it—the school system is dated and disfunctional. Schools were originally designed to educate the children of the upper classes, who had the wealth and time to devote to mental pursuits as a sign of their superiority. Gradually, in the 19th and early 20th century, education became universal.
But what does the school system really do? Most Indigos agree that what is taught in school is rarely relevent to real life. It confines them to mental or “head” experience, and most Indigos want real life experience to be their teacher.
addition, sitting
behind a school desk for 6 hours a day is seen as no more than training to sit
behind and office desk for 8 hours a day or more, and most Indigos have no
interest in that life path.
Modern school classes in South Africa usually consist of 30 or so children and one teacher. The system functions because the children agree to be controlled by the teacher. However, as more and more Indigos say no, the system begins to falter.
Perhaps indigos are
teaching us that there are better ways to learn. Perhaps, beyond a few hours a
day of basic literacy and numeracy, the child of the future will choose
projects to be pursued in the community under supervision of parents or
teachers. These could be “real life” oriented, and be of benefit to both the
learner and the community.
Meanwhile, more and more
Indigos are saying no to formal school education.
Indigo Stories
These are real life expereinces drawn from my work with Indigos.I met Alison when she was 15 and had just dropped out of school. She was attractive, intelligent and sensitive. She came from an affluent family, her father being a respected medical practitioner.
Indigo Stories
These are real life expereinces drawn from my work with Indigos.I met Alison when she was 15 and had just dropped out of school. She was attractive, intelligent and sensitive. She came from an affluent family, her father being a respected medical practitioner.
Alison absolutely
refused to go to school, and had become invloved with drugs. Her parents, not
knowing how to cope, were forced to allow her to leave school and to deal with
her drug problem and her rebellion. She was placed in a drug rehab programme.
She wanted to study
Reiki and Healing with crystals, but was really too immature to be a healer.
Eventually she became a
model, and was able to get work in London and Tokyo. She earned large sums of
money and was able to travel the world. Being attractive, she had no shortage
of male companions in her life.
How does one tell an
Indigo like Alison that she needed to go the school? She plainly did not. She
was able to live a life beyond what most people aspire to without spending
years at school and university. This is typical of Indigos : they work out the
system and then use it to their advantage rather than being controlled by it.
Peter, on the other hand, went into a deep depression in his final year of school. he dropped out, not because of work pressure, but because he was able to see the futility and the illusion of the school system. His father was opposed, but his mother with whom he lived, was willing to allow his journey.
After several months of
dealing with his depression, Peter decided not to return to school, but to
pursue a technical diploma for which he did not need a school certificate.
This option gave him the time to research his other interests in life, alternative healing and healthier lifestyles.
A more tragic story is
that of Jamila, a young Asian South African girl who also dropped out in her
final year of school. In Jamila’s case, her parents were academic high achievers,
and Jamila in fact did buckle under the pressure to perform as well as the
suppressed anger at her parents “absence” from her life while pursuing their
careers.
She is immensely gifted,
sensitive, and loving, as well as beautiful. But she developed an eating
disoroder as a signal that all was not right in her world.
Unfortunately, her parents adopted the “child as problem” approach, and sought to find someone to “cure” her. They were unable to understand that their own behaviour and the system in which they thrived was inimical to their Indigo daughter and her gentle and sensitive approach to life
Then, on the lighter side, is the story of 4 year old Kim, who informed her
mother that she was not going to go to school. She intended to be a mother when
she grew up, and for that, she told Mom, she didn’t need to go to school.
Mother tended not to agree, and Kim was enrolled at the local Waldorf School.
The Waldorf and
Montessori systems of education seem to be the best available to Indigos at the
moment. Many Indigo parents are also going for the home schooling option, which
allows for more flexibility of approach while still ensuring that the child gets
the necessary education.
Systems Busting : Indigos and the Medical System
Another area where Indigos are making their presence felt is with the medical system. This is as a result of the medical diagnoses of ADD and Hyperactivity, or “minimal brain disfunction”. Medical science’s answer is a drug - usually Ritalin, sometimes Prozac.I have seen a child as young as seven on a medically prescribed anti-depressant. I have heard a respected paediatrician recommend that children as young as three be put on Ritalin.
Systems Busting : Indigos and the Medical System
Another area where Indigos are making their presence felt is with the medical system. This is as a result of the medical diagnoses of ADD and Hyperactivity, or “minimal brain disfunction”. Medical science’s answer is a drug - usually Ritalin, sometimes Prozac.I have seen a child as young as seven on a medically prescribed anti-depressant. I have heard a respected paediatrician recommend that children as young as three be put on Ritalin.
There is much debate about the pros and cons of Ritalin, and I am not going to go into that here. Suffice to say that Ritalin is a drug of the amphetemine stimulant class. It has side effects and withdrawal symptoms, and is also addictive if misused.
The significance of this debate in terms of Indigos, is that many people are now questioning a medical system that drugs small children with stimulant drugs that alter brain chemistry as a way of coping with behaviour that doesn’t conform to the “norm” of the “average child”.
In my work with children
I have encountered children that range from gifted and “brilliant” to those who
are autistic and learning disabled. In this journey, I have come to believe
that there is no such thing as the “average child”. Each child is like a
snowflake - unique and individual, with its own needs and desires.
Yet the education system is geared to the “average child”, and if a child does not conform to this model they are drugged into conformity. Dr Peter Breggin, an American psychiatrist who is anti the use of Ritalin, points out that what is defined as ADD or ADHD is just the manifestation of a child that functions at “one end of the energy spectrum” - the high end!
People who work with
Indigos prefer to call these children “kinesthetic learners”, and to suggest
that they need modes of learning suited to their energy levels, rather than
Ritalin.
Diet has also been shown to have a major effect on children. The stimulants in caffeine, refined sugars and food additives, all have a negative effect on children who are already high in energy. Eliminating these foods and concentrating on fresh and organic foods has been known to help to balance over-stimulated Indigos. Many Indigos, in fact, prefer this kind of diet if they are allowed access to it. But, busy parents often aggravate the problems by feeding their children processed and convenience foods which upset their sensitive systems.
Indigos are teaching us once again of the importance of holistic living, natural therapies and healing, and natural, unprocessed food. They are also challenging a medical system that sees pharmaceutical drugs as “magic bullets”, regardless of the consequences and side-effects.
The Unhappy IndigoIf Indigos are given the opportunity to express who they are, if they are honored and respected, they can become highly sensitive, loving and gifted people. If not, they tend to become self-destructive and disfunctional. The high incidence of drug abuse, eating disorders and disfunctional behaviour among Indigos is an indicator that the way we live is disfunctional.
Please, Never Tell them they’re Not Good Enough.....
Indigos are born with a strong sense of “mission”. They are the spiritual warriors of the Indigo Ray. They know they have something really special to do on this planet.Yet, from the moment they arrive, they are bombarded with negative messages that affect their self-worth. From the time they begin to walk, there is a constant “don’t do this/don’t do that”, to messages that say “you are stupid”. I have seen a four year old who informed me that she was, unfortunately, stupid. How damaging this is, especially to an Indigo.
If an Indigo is made to feel worthless and not good enough, they tend to feel that they are failures. They have failed at their mission, and this makes them depressed, angry, neurotic and self destructive.
So please, if you parent or care for an Indigo, make sure you are affirming of their value and worth. Respect them for who they are, no matter how different they are to you.
Children are not meant
to be clones of their parents, or to carry the aspirations of the parent. Allow
them to be who they are, and they will flourish and thrive.
Indigo Stories
I have worked with many Indigos, to help them to balance their lives and be successful.
Indigo Stories
I have worked with many Indigos, to help them to balance their lives and be successful.
Nine year old Sonya came
to me with intense eczema all over her body. She was sleeping badly and was
anxious and depressed. I referred her to a homeopath for treatment for the
eczema. The homeopath used homeopathic and naturopathic treatments together
with diet. When I worked with Sonya I used Energy Balancing, crystals and
visualization techniques to help her. After several months, her mother reported
that the eczema was nearly completely cleared, and that she was happy and
enjoying her life.
Twenty-four year old Lara came to me in a deeply depressed state. She was unemployed, despite being a qualified artist. She wept her way through our initial sessions. I worked with her intensively over a period of a bout 18 months, seeing her once a month. We used Emotional Clearing and Regression techniques, together with Energy Balancing and Crystal therapy.
Lara found a job that
suited her talents, and eventually moved on to one that included travelling.
She was thrilled at the shifts and changes in her life as a result of the
spiritual work. In addition, her social life improved and she left her mother’s
home and began sharing a house with a friend.
By Celia Fenn at Starchildglobal.com
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