If You Feel Called to Help the World Heal, You’re Not Alone
Across cities and towns, healers are quietly doing the work. Now is the time we start finding each other.
Finding Your People: How Local Healers Unite Branches Begin
Many of us who walk the healing path carry the same quiet knowing.
That we are here to help guide something new into the world.
A gentler way of living.
A more connected way of being.
A world where healing, intuition, and compassion are not pushed to the margins but woven into everyday life.
You could call it a transition.
You could call it a collective awakening.
Many simply call it the New Earth.
But something interesting is happening right now.
All over the world, healers are feeling that call… while sitting in their separate homes, scrolling through Instagram, wondering the same thing:
How?
How do we actually help during this time of change?
How do we reach the people who need healing?
How do we build something that feels bigger than our individual practices?
And one of the answers may be much simpler than we think.
We find each other.
Because one of the most common things I hear from healers is this:
“I don’t know any other healers near me.”
Or sometimes it’s:
“I know they must be out there… I just don’t know how to find them.”
For a long time, healers have been scattered across cities and towns, each building their work quietly — often without realizing how many others are doing the same thing nearby.
But that is beginning to change.
One of the visions behind Healers Unite is the creation of local branches — small, organically growing networks of healers who know each other, support each other, and create spaces where the healing community can gather.
And the beautiful part is this:
Local branches don’t start with an organization.
They start with one healer deciding to reach out.
The First Step: Finding Each Other
Before gatherings, events, or meetings ever happen, the first step is simply finding your people.
And one of the easiest ways to begin doing that is through shared hashtags.
We’re beginning to encourage healers to start using location-based tags that make it easier to discover other practitioners nearby.
For example:
#healersunite
This helps connect practitioners to the broader movement.
But we’re also encouraging healers to begin using regional hashtags tied to their local area.
For example:
#healersunite_RDU
#healersunite_LAX
#healersunite_DEN
These tags make it easier for practitioners in the same region to start discovering one another.
Think of them as digital gathering points.
If you start using them, other healers searching those tags will begin to find you — and you may discover people in your area you didn’t even know were there.
Sometimes the first branch begins with nothing more than two healers realizing they live twenty minutes apart.
Helping People Find Healing Near Them
These hashtags don’t only help healers find each other.
They also help people who are looking for healing services discover practitioners in their area.
Many people searching for Reiki, energy work, intuitive guidance, breathwork, or other healing modalities begin their search on social media.
When healers consistently use tags like:
#healersunite
#healersunite_RDU
#healersunite_ATL
#healersunite_PDX
it creates a visible pathway for people who are seeking healing to find the practitioners already doing this work in their community.
Over time, these tags can begin to function like living directories — constantly updating as practitioners share their work.
In other words, these hashtags serve two purposes at the same time:
• helping healers find one another
• helping people in need of healing find practitioners nearby.
Naming Local Branches
As these connections grow, healers can begin forming local Healers Unite branches.
To make it easy for practitioners to find one another across platforms, we suggest using a consistent naming format.
For example:
@_healersunite_RDU
@_healersunite_ATL
@_healersunite_PDX
Using airport codes helps keep things simple and recognizable.
In larger cities, branches may naturally divide into neighborhoods or regions as they grow.
The goal isn’t to create complicated structures.
It’s simply to create clear signals so healers can find each other.
Gathering in Existing Healing Spaces
Most cities already have places where healers naturally gather.
Metaphysical shops.
Wellness studios.
Community healing spaces.
These locations often serve as quiet hubs for the local healing community.
Local branches can begin by simply reaching out to these spaces and asking if they would be open to hosting occasional Healers Unite gatherings.
These don’t need to be elaborate events.
They can be simple meetups where practitioners introduce themselves, share about their work, and begin building relationships with one another.
Because community doesn’t grow from complicated systems.
It grows from conversations.
You Don’t Need Permission
One of the most important things to understand about Healers Unite branches is this:
You do not need permission to begin.
If you feel called to connect with other healers in your area, you can start right now.
Use the hashtags.
Introduce yourself.
Reach out to practitioners you discover nearby.
If you feel inspired to take it further, you can follow the Local Branch Guide created to help practitioners start gatherings in their communities.
Start Here
If you’re wondering where to begin, start with something simple.
Start using the hashtags.
Search your region.
Introduce yourself.
You may be surprised how quickly other healers begin to appear.
Because the moment we start recognizing each other, the field begins to organize — and the path becomes easier for everyone walking it.
The Beginning of Something Larger
And perhaps this is how the larger transition begins.
Not through one person trying to carry the weight of the world alone.
But through healers recognizing one another, gathering in their communities, and realizing that the work many of us feel called to do was never meant to happen in isolation.
Sometimes the first step toward helping shepherd a new world into being is simply this:
finding the others who are here to help build it with you.


