Breaking Chains and Trusting the Journey with Serin Silva’s Spiritual Secrets
Serin Silva is the kind of person who upends expectations. She has built and launched brands at Fortune 500 levels, and she also reads energy, works as a medium, practices Reiki, and coaches social-emotional intelligence. The through-line of her work is simple: when business, body, and soul align, transformation happens faster—and more sustainably—than any external hustle can deliver.
From survival mode to spiritual lineage
Serin’s intuition did not arrive fully formed. Growing up in a traumatic environment taught her hyper-vigilance—an adult-by-five kind of maturity that kept her attuned to signals around her. She used that sensitivity for strategy in the corporate world for years before recognizing its spiritual source.
"I was an adult by the time I was five."
It wasn’t until much later—after exploring energy healing and mediumship—that a chance conversation with family revealed a lineage of psychic ability on her grandmother’s side, traced to a small island steeped in myth. That discovery reframed what had always felt like “extra” into an inherited gift. Serin’s daughter, now highly intuitive herself, affirmed that this thread runs through the family.
Integrating modalities: coaching, Reiki, and mediumship as a toolkit
Serin blends techniques to meet people where they are. She describes her work as a practical toolkit: when words and rational strategy fall short, body-based work and energetic clearing open access to what’s really going on. A simple example: a CEO showing up with neck tension. Instead of jumping straight to strategy, Serin asks, “What are you not saying?” and taps into somatic cues.
She often begins with energetic clearing—Reiki or other hands-on healing—then moves into coaching. Clearing allows clients to drop into the body and access feelings that were previously “locked.” Once that energetic stuckness shifts, voice and intention can follow, making goal-setting and strategy far more meaningful.
How Serin uses these tools together
Reiki to remove blocks: Hands-on work to loosen the body’s energetic constriction.
Somatic coaching: Bringing attention to breath, belly, and feet to make inner states visible and actionable.
Intuitive insight: Reading the subtle field to name unconscious blind spots and patterns.
Social-emotional assessment: Mapping how someone shows up at work and tailoring strategies for leadership and culture change.
Breaking the chain of trauma
One of the most powerful parts of Serin’s story is how she intentionally broke the cycle of ancestral trauma with her daughter. Rather than transmit the same survival coping strategies, she raised her child with different inputs: nature, slower rhythms, and a Waldorf-style schooling that prioritized development over hustle.
The result is instructive: her daughter learned to be effective without exhaustively chasing achievement. That model reflects a wider cultural shift Serin sees—an emergence of feminine energy, an impulse away from the punitive, competitive systems of the past toward more integrated ways of living and leading.
Practical steps to break intergenerational patterns
Notice inherited survival strategies and how they show up in your parenting or leadership.
Create counter-experiences: more time in nature, slower mornings, and choices that emphasize presence over productivity.
Teach emotional literacy early: name feelings, notice body sensations, and practice grounding rituals together.
Model boundaries and self-care so the next generation sees different options for thriving.
Working with high-performing leaders: somatics in the boardroom
Executives often come to Serin with achievements under their belt but a feeling of being stuck or unfulfilled. The surprising fix is rarely another outward strategy. The work is interior: clearing energetic gunk and training leaders to access their bodies during high-pressure moments.
Simple, repeatable practices translate well to corporate settings: grounding through the feet, pausing to breathe before speaking, and brief somatic checks during meetings. These micro-habits build presence and confidence, and help leaders shift from doing more to being more centered.
Mediumship: a compassionate view of life beyond the physical
Serin has worked as a medium for over a decade. Her approach reframes death as movement across planes of experience rather than an absolute end. She senses souls continuing to engage in activities they loved: tinkering in a woodshop, sitting with friends, or navigating their own process of letting go.
Not all crossings are smooth. Sudden deaths, addictions, or trauma can leave souls “stuck” between realms. Part of her work is gently supporting transition—creating energetic space for those souls to continue their journey while offering comfort and meaning to the living.
"I don't really think of people as dead when I do this work. Their energy often looks like they're doing something in another realm."
Being an empath in an extroverted body
One of the more nuanced topics Serin explores is the paradox of being an extroverted empath. She loves people and thrives in social settings, yet outgoing energy drains her quickly. That combination requires creative self-care and boundaries that honor both needs.
Her toolkit for energetic hygiene is practical and accessible. When she feels drained after intense conversations, she goes into water—quick showers or Epsom salt baths—to wash off the residual energy. She opens windows, places protective crystals, and performs cord cutting and golden cord visualizations after readings to disengage from others’ fields.
Daily spiritual hygiene practices
Grounding: Walk barefoot, press your feet to the floor, or visualize a cord connecting to the earth.
Water clearing: Short showers or Epsom salt baths to release heavy energy.
Energetic disconnection: Perform golden cord and cord-cutting exercises after intense interactions.
Space clearing: Open windows, diffuse cleansing scents, or use crystals to shift home energy.
Exit strategies: Gracefully remove yourself when someone else’s energy becomes too heavy.
Trusting the journey during a spiritual awakening
Spiritual awakening can feel isolating and disorienting. Serin’s invitation is grounding and simple: trust you are supported. When trust feels hard, trust the body instead.
Practical grounding cues she recommends: run your feet across the floor, lie on your back and visualize a chord connecting you to the earth, and notice the sensation of being held. These tactile practices re-anchor you in the body when the mind spirals.
She also reframes Source as benevolent. The inner urgings, impulses, and desires that arise during an awakening are not punishments but guidance toward healing and expansion. Listening to them, and acting from a place of embodied trust, is the work.
What to expect in a clarity session
For those wanting to try intuitive support, Serin offers a short clarity session designed to be empowering and grounded. She asks permission to connect, brings the client’s topic into focus, and provides actionable insight. The goal is not to create dependency but to hand tools and clarity back to the person.
If you leave a session feeling confused or diminished, that’s a red flag. Ethical intuitive work should leave you feeling clearer, stronger, and more able to take next steps on your own.
Final thoughts: courage, presence, and embodied trust
Breaking chains—whether ancestral trauma, cultural conditioning, or personal patterns—requires courage, curiosity, and steady presence. Serin’s blended approach reminds us that transformation is not purely mental or strategic. It happens when we open to the body, clear the energy that keeps us small, and trust the intelligence inside.
The path she maps is both practical and soulful: tend your energy, teach the next generation differently, and cultivate rituals that help you return to center. In doing so, you shift from doing more to being more—and that, as many leaders find, is the real lever for sustained, meaningful change.