Scenario 1
Relationship Urgency
Client: “I need to know whether this person is my destiny. We keep breaking up and coming back together.”
Practice Focus: Emotional grounding, patience, and distinguishing attachment from destiny language.
Model Response: “Let us slow down and bring clarity to what is happening. Repetition in a relationship can come from unresolved patterns and not necessarily destiny. This matter should be approached with care.”
Scenario 2
Health Fear
Client: “I feel weak and sick. I think I’m under spiritual attack.”
Practice Focus: Safety first, grounded language, and not replacing medical attention.
Model Response: “Your physical condition should be checked properly first. Not every difficulty is spiritual attack. Once your health is addressed, then deeper layers can be explored carefully.”
Scenario 3
Money Trouble
Client: “Money keeps leaving me. I think someone crossed me.”
Practice Focus: Practical accountability, financial order, and avoiding instant enemy narratives.
Model Response: “We should examine both the practical and spiritual sides. Sometimes loss comes from disorder, timing, or structure and not only opposition. Let us understand the pattern first.”
Scenario 4
Family Conflict
Client: “My sister and I don’t speak anymore. I want to know who is wrong.”
Practice Focus: Neutrality, reframing, and healing over blame.
Model Response: “The deeper question may not be who is wrong, but what has broken between you. Restoration often requires clarity, responsibility, and truth from more than one side.”
Scenario 5
Dream Interpretation
Client: “I saw my ancestor in a dream. Tell me what it means.”
Practice Focus: Restraint, gathering detail, and avoiding rushed interpretation.
Model Response: “Dreams can carry many layers. Before assigning meaning, we should understand the full dream, the feeling around it, and the context in which it came.”
Scenario 6
Yes / No Pressure
Client: “Just tell me yes or no. Should I move next month?”
Practice Focus: Not reducing major life questions to impulse answers.
Model Response: “A move involves timing, purpose, preparation, and what surrounds the transition. A simple yes or no may feel quick, but it will not always give the clarity needed.”
Scenario 7
Grief and Presence
Client: “My loved one just passed, and I feel them around me. Are they trying to speak to me?”
Practice Focus: Compassion first, restraint in grief, and not exploiting sorrow.
Model Response: “You are in a tender season of grief, and it is natural to feel memory and presence strongly. We should approach this with reverence and not force conclusions too quickly.”
Scenario 8
Fear of Enemies
Client: “People are jealous of me. Who is against me?”
Practice Focus: Grounding, de-escalation, and reducing paranoia.
Model Response: “Rather than centering your attention on enemies, it is more powerful to establish alignment, order, and protection in your own life. That keeps the mind from becoming scattered.”
Scenario 9
Seeking Validation
Client: “I already made the decision. I just need spirit to confirm it.”
Practice Focus: Honesty, maturity, and not becoming an approval stamp.
Model Response: “Since the decision has already been made, the wiser question may now be how to move forward with discipline, truth, and responsibility from this point.”
Scenario 10
Marriage Trouble
Client: “My marriage is unstable. Is it spiritually over?”
Practice Focus: Weight of covenant questions, careful language, and referral when needed.
Model Response: “That is a serious matter and should not be reduced to a quick spiritual declaration. It is better to understand what has changed and what condition the relationship is truly in.”
Scenario 11
Calling to Priesthood
Client: “I think I am called to priesthood. Is that true?”
Practice Focus: Humility, discipline, and separating calling from fascination or status.
Model Response: “A calling is revealed through discipline, consistency, humility, and service over time. It is not measured only by strong feeling in one moment.”
Scenario 12
Repeat Crisis Client
Client: “Everything keeps going wrong. Every few days it’s a new emergency.”
Practice Focus: Pattern recognition, boundaries, and helping the person seek order instead of crisis dependence.
Model Response: “We may need to look at the whole pattern instead of one emergency at a time. Sometimes the deeper work is restoring structure to the way a person is moving through life.”