On paper, I am an economist. In life, I have been many things—and each path has led me deeper into the essence of who I truly am.
My spiritual awakening began in 2007, a rapid unfolding that opened door after door within my consciousness. Through profound challenges and luminous breakthroughs, I was guided onto the path of supporting others as an energy healer, spiritual teacher, coach, and women’s circle facilitator. Since then, I have dedicated my life to helping people return to their hearts and remember how to live from a higher level of awareness.
I am also a writer, which initially started with blogs, but recently published my second book, a fairy tale dedicated to New Earth Children, The Tales of Hariel.
Travelling has always been one of my greatest loves. Over time, it became clear that my work and my wandering soul were meant to intertwine. Sacred sites hold ancient frequencies, stories, and blessings—and teaching in nature or at these powerful places brings a depth and magic that no classroom ever could. The land itself becomes a co teacher, a gateway, a living temple.
My connection with St. Francis and St. Clare began when I was young, through Franco Zeffirelli’s Brother Sun, Sister Moon—a film I still wholeheartedly recommend. As my awakening deepened, so did my relationship with them. I connect not only with their historical presence, but with the ascended master energies behind them—Kuthumi and Amalclara—the enlightened beings who have guided humanity across lifetimes. I look beyond the veils to the pioneers of consciousness they truly are.
If you would like to know more about my healing work, consciousness workshops, Heart Light healing method training, please visit www.angelicrainbow.com
In 2024, during a session with my medium, I was told it was time to reconnect with the lifetime in which I had experienced the highest level of sacredness: a life in Assisi. The moment she spoke the words, tears streamed down my face. Three days later, I was on a flight to Perugia.
That journey changed me. I wasn’t interested in tourist routes—I seeked the true pathways, the hidden sanctuaries, the places where St. Francis and Clare walked in devotion. In the olive groves of San Damiano, I entered a state of bliss that lasted an hour. In that stillness, I knew: I would one day bring groups here.
Although Assisi was the first vision for Mystic Travel, it is only the beginning. I also guide journeys to other sacred places that have woven themselves into my soul across lifetimes—most notably the ancient, mystical landscapes of Ireland, where nearly every stone carries memory.
The remembrance of Avalon lives deeply within me as well, calling me to Glastonbury in the UK, which is also offered as part of Mystic Travel. In time, the enchanted sites of Hungary will be added—each destination a thread in the tapestry of my soul’s history.
Through these journeys, my intention is simple yet profound:
reconnect to our sacred past and to help you experience the magic of life, the truth of your own being, and the beauty of your soul.
When you witness the sacredness of the outer world, you begin to remember the sacredness within.
And in that remembrance, transformation begins.
Saint Francis & Saint Clare of Assisi — Masters of Living Faith
Giovanni di Pietro di Bernardone, whom we now know as Francis of Assisi, was born in Assisi in 1181 or 1182 into a wealthy merchant family. As a young man, he lived a life of excess, pleasure, and ambition—until a profound inner awakening redirected him entirely. What followed was not merely a religious conversion, but a radical remembrance of a deeper truth: that divine life could be lived directly, simply, and in intimate communion with all of creation.
Francis renounced his inheritance publicly, choosing voluntary poverty not as punishment or denial, but as liberation.
His faith was embodied and absolute—he trusted life itself to provide. Poet, mystic, and lover of the natural world, he spoke to animals, sang prayers to the elements, and lived in such alignment that his very presence reawakened devotion in others. In 1224, he received the stigmata, living with the wounds of Christ for the final two years of his life until his death in October 1226. While suffering was considered virtuous in the religious context of the time, Francis’s true mastery lay not in pain, but in love lived without separation.
Alongside him stood Chiara Offreduccio, later known as Clare of Assisi, born in 1194 into an aristocratic family. Deeply moved by Francis’s way of life, Clare made a daring choice that defied social, familial, and ecclesiastical expectations. She left her privileged life behind and founded what would become the Order of Poor Ladies (later known as the Poor Clares), offering women a radical spiritual path grounded in simplicity, devotion, and inner authority.
Together, Francis and Clare were reformers not through rebellion, but through embodiment. They did not seek to overthrow the Church, but to restore its living essence—humility, compassion, and direct relationship with the divine. Their work was a quiet revolution: returning faith from institutions back into the body, the land, and daily life. In a time of hierarchy and excess, they lived a spiritual mastery rooted in equality, presence, and love—principles that still resonate far beyond religion today.