Distance healing is a game-changer.
Reiki practitioners can channel universal life force energy across time and space, helping those who cannot be assisted in person.
But more often than not, we focus only on the transmission and forget a few essential elements that could make or break the session.
These aren’t optional considerations.
Or additions to enhance your practice.
They are foundational awareness points that determine whether your practice genuinely serves others or slowly depletes you.
Let’s see what they are:
Use these 4 elements to ensure an ethical and beneficial approach to distance healing.
You won’t find these in most training materials. But after years of practice, I have found they make a big difference in creating a sustainable approach to Reiki distance healing, ensuring both parties enjoy a beneficial experience.
1. Time
The time you spend sending universal life force energy matters more than you think.
Here’s why:
Let’s say you have a list of 5 people you wish to support with healing. And you decided, for efficiency, to send universal energy to all of them at once, one session per week.
Considering that a regular session takes about 10 minutes, naturally, you’d think 10 minutes is enough.
But those 10 minutes aren’t split equally.
They don’t account for 10 minutes per person.
In your effort to help as many people as possible, you dilute your practice and, therefore, its effects.
You could approach this as a group session — that’s fine.
But if you want to help each person individually, it’s best to send them Reiki one at a time.
The same applies to Reiki projects.
If you have multiple goals you want to support with Reiki, reserve one session per goal.
Time matters in distance healing.
And ensuring you save enough for the best outcome is time well spent.
2. Consent
Always get consent.
This is a non-negotiable rule in distance healing.
You want the person to be fully aware and, ideally, present to receive the universal life force energy. Otherwise, you’d be violating their free will, even with good intentions.
Here are some best practices to follow:
Relationships – You need consent from at least one member. Even so, you will send energy for the greater good of the relationship, not direct it to each individual. Families and couples form an egregore — the sum of thoughts and pieces of information that coexist.
Children – You don’t need permission to practice Reiki on your own children. But it’s mandatory to get consent from the parent if the child is not yours. You are not allowed to intervene by your own will because you “believe” they should do better. Remember, most of the time, spirits belong in certain families based on karmic debts.
Pets – Same thing with pets. Of course, if you find a poor thing suffering on the street, you can aid it with energy healing. But in general, it’s best to have the owner’s consent.
3. Protection
Energy work implies entering a person’s energy field.
This field holds programs, projections, and all sorts of energies unique to that person. Some are positive. Others less so. Regardless, you will absorb part of them when you channel universal energy to them.
That’s why it’s essential to protect yourself.
Without this layer, you go in vulnerable and open to receiving whatever comes at you.
Whether you activate Reiki symbols on your chakras or engulf yourself in a sphere of light, you want to offer assistance without impacting your energy field too much.
I say “too much” because you will still absorb part of their energy. That’s why cleansing is essential after the session.
Still, there’s one thing most practitioners miss.
Energy shielding starts within.
Protection methods are useful and can get very specific. But they must be installed on a strong foundation. Without it, their effectiveness diminishes significantly.
That’s why I always say: the best protection is you.
Raise your vibration, cleanse yourself through self-treatment, and clear karmic debts through pilgrimages and selfless work to become a beacon of light, repelling negative energies by default.
4. Flexibility
You don’t know what you don’t know.
We are very limited as human beings. Even if you strive to evolve through spiritual work, most of us never surpass a certain level. Therefore, it’s healthy to lead with that and know our place here in the universe, at least for now.
When it comes to channeling distance healing, you don’t know what’s best for the person on the other end. You don’t know their past, karmic debts, or where they’re supposed to end up.
But you can offer them assistance.
You can help them see what they’re blind to and clear the path forward by releasing them from their energetic strings.
In doing so, you want to make sure everything happens “in accordance with the Divine will and for the greater good of the person.”
Never assume you know better.
Of course, some situations require a clear intention. That’s okay. And it’s good to set it upfront and channel energy for a specific purpose.
But even then, it’s best to let the universe know you want everything to unfold optimally for your patient.
Four elements. One practice. No shortcuts.
Time shapes how much energy each person actually receives.
Consent, protection, and flexibility determine whether that energy serves them or serves your assumptions.
Taken together, these aren’t rules imposed on the practice from the outside but what the practice looks like when a practitioner takes full responsibility for the work. Mastering the technical side of distance healing is achievable in a relatively short time. Developing the awareness to use it wisely takes considerably longer.
That gap is where most practitioners stall.
The session begins long before you open the channel.