
Our techniques
Evolutionary Astrology
Historical introduction
Long before astrology was reduced to a paragraph on the last page of a magazine, it was one of the oldest forms of human understanding.
Mesopotamian, Egyptian and Greek civilizations used it not to predict the future in a literal sense, but to comprehend the cycles, rhythms and forces that move through both the cosmos and the inner life of people.
It was a symbolic language, not an oracle. A system for reading patterns, not pronouncing decrees.
Over time, and especially from the 20th century onwards, that profound dimension became largely buried beneath mass solar astrology: the single-sign horoscope which, although it has its place, barely scratches the surface of the system's true complexity.
Our perspective
Your birth chart is a snapshot of the sky at the moment you were born: the positions of the Sun, Moon and planets at that precise instant form a symbolic language that reveals energetic dynamics.
At ConscientiaEchoes we don't use astrology to label or define. We don't believe the birth chart determines who you are. We read it as a map of life and its possibilities.
Within it, there are patterns we may repeat without knowing, across different relationships, different contexts, different moments of life. We can also recognize certain energies and lived experiences that present our soul with the possibility of evolution and learning, and which, without realizing it, we might spend our whole life avoiding.
This creates a growth zone where life repeatedly pushes us to connect with that energy, making us live what we reject so we can grow, learn and transcend our limitations.
Evolutionary astrology is a symbolic language that allows us to recognize:
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repeated emotional patterns
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unconscious tendencies
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learning areas
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moments of transition
From there, consciousness can do its work.
And choosing becomes possible.
We don't seek external certainties. We seek to expand internal understanding.
The map is not the territory. But it can help us walk it with greater clarity.
Flower Essence Therapy
Historical introduction
In the 1930s, Welsh physician and researcher Edward Bach went through his own process of profound crisis. Having worked in pathology and bacteriology, he reached a conviction that gradually distanced him from conventional medicine: that illness was not the real problem, but the expression of a deeper conflict between a person's emotional state and their essential nature.
Bach left his London practice, moved to the English countryside and began a process of research that could be called both intuitive and scientific. Observing plants, flowers, people, repeated behaviors, patterns and his own body as a sensitive receptor, he identified 38 floral essences designed to accompany states such as fear, uncertainty, sadness or lack of confidence, each corresponding to a specific integral state.
His system didn't seek to suppress symptoms or modify behaviors from the outside. It sought to restore internal balance so the person themselves could find their way. His vision was simple: treat the person, not just the symptom.
Our perspective
Bach flowers are the natural extension of what is worked on in session.
What moves during the encounter needs time to settle, integrate, continue unfolding.
The essences accompany that process in the days that follow.
The floral formula is elaborated personally after the session, according to your birth chart which allows for individualized treatment.
The flowers don't do the work for you. They facilitate awareness, soften resistances and help integrate what has been understood.
We don't prescribe them as a solution.
We offer them as energetic support.
They're not here to take you to an ideal or predefined state of wellbeing.
They're here to accompany you in your specific process, in whatever movement corresponds to you.
Sometimes that means calm.
Other times it means something moves with greater clarity.
The flowers don't intervene. They accompany.
Holistic Therapy
Historical introduction
The holistic vision of the human being is not new.
It was present in Indian Ayurvedic medicine, in traditional Chinese medicine, in shamanic traditions from different cultures, and in early Greek philosophical systems, where body and soul were not understood as separate entities but as dimensions of the same living organism.
It was modernity, with its need for specialization and fragmentation, that began dividing the being into pieces treatable separately.
In the 20th century, that separation began to show its limits.
German Doctor Ryke Geerd Hamer, based on his own experience of illness and loss, developed what he called the Five Biological Laws: a new paradigm proposing that diseases are not errors of the body but meaningful biological responses, activated by unresolved conflicts.
According to Hamer, each affected organ corresponds to a specific type of psychic conflict, and the body always acts in coherence with what the psyche is processing.
His work, although controversial within official medicine, opened a door that many subsequent therapeutic currents have been unable to ignore:
the body doesn't fall ill randomly. The body speaks.
Simultaneously, psychoneuroimmunology was confirming from biology what these traditions already intuited: that the nervous system, immune system and emotional state of a person are in constant communication, affecting each other in real time.
Our perspective
Working holistically means listening to everything the person brings, without hierarchizing.
A physical pain may be telling something emotional.
A thought pattern may be holding tension in the body.
A moment of vital crisis may be the gateway to a transformation the being was already needing.
In our sessions we don't separate.
We don't arrive at the consultation with a map of what should be worked on.
We arrive with presence and with tools that allow us to accompany the complete being:
Evolutionary astrology, floral therapy and holistic vision as complementary languages. Tools to expand perception.
