Politics

The Spread Your Third Eye Podcast Turns One: A Year of Heart-Centered Transmission

By Lyssa-Noel Frater

Copyright laweekly

The Spread Your Third Eye Podcast Turns One: A Year of Heart-Centered Transmission

Spread Your Third Eye celebrates a year of reimagining how listeners engage with spiritual practice and personal transformation. The podcast has established a steady rhythm of long-form episodes that weave channeled teachings into practical exercises and candid conversations. Listeners return not for lofty platitudes, but for grounded methods they can apply between episodes and to witness the human process of change.

Co-hosted by Georgia Jean, founder of Circle Evolution, and Mia Reitz, the show blends intuitive wisdom with high-level production. “The goal is to open minds. It’s about having the conversations that many are too scared to have openly. We give our audience the permission to explore these ideas that may still feel taboo,” adds Georgia.

Georgia channels the Circle of Light, an expanded consciousness, whose higher frequency transmissions and advanced knowledge are believed to bypass the mind’s resistance and go straight to the energetic root of personal blocks and global issues. Their unconditionally loving presence creates a safe, ego-free space for transformation, allowing listeners to experience deep shifts without years of therapeutic unraveling.

Meanwhile, Mia curates and guides discussions that translate high-frequency material into everyday language. Together, they make esoteric tools accessible through interviews, live channeling sessions, a growing archive of teachings, and exercises that support growth in body, relationships, and career. Each episode offers both insight and clear steps, so listeners leave not just inspired, but empowered.

The podcast’s magnetic pull rests on a three-part dynamic. Georgia brings deep spiritual training and a pragmatic, embodied sensibility. She channels expansive intelligence while grounding that in the fundamental elements of everyday life, whether relationships, careers, wellness, or goals.

Mia supplies the second element. Now a co-host and producer, but began as a client, whose real-world breakthroughs function as a living case study for the methods. The third leg is diverse guest curation, including entrepreneurs, entertainers, artists, and other thought leaders whose perspectives keep the conversation relevant across social, technological, and cultural arenas.

Georgia’s personal trajectory explains why the material lands as it does. A teenager interested in palmistry and astrology, she later studied fine art and experienced creative flow states that became foundational to her trance work.

Her 11 years in stand-up comedy taught her to hold attention and speak with clarity, and in the mid-2000s, a verbal channeling capacity spontaneously emerged. Over two decades, in addition to the thousands of hours of information she has received from her guides, Georgia has trained in a range of energy-healing disciplines, implementing such knowledge into her own life, from being an avid skydiver to entrepreneurship. The guidance has been tried and tested, allowing her to transcend her own limitations, in turn, giving her the ability to do the same for others.

On a practical level, her work models a therapeutic-energetic protocol. In a typical session, Georgia drops into a trance-like state, and the Circle of Light scans the caller’s field to determine whether a problem is lodged in nervous-system programming, ancestral trauma, or something greater, such as a collective imprinting.

From that scan, targeted interventions included grounding practices to restore embodiment, nervous-system techniques to lower threshold resistance, and clearing methods that address both personal and systemic layers. This lived experience gives Georgia a level of expertise often unheard of, and she brings every part of that experience to the podcast.

Mia’s contribution widens the show’s reach. As co-host and producer, she strips jargon away, asks clarifying questions that reveal mechanism rather than mystique, and shapes episodes into narrative journeys newcomers can follow. Her own progress of manifested homes, business momentum, and repeated energetic shifts showcase that the techniques translate into measurable results. By occupying both the client’s seat and the producer’s desk, Mia models how someone can be supported by the work and then steward that support back into broader conversation.

Guest conversations expand the podcast’s credibility and utility. The hosts realize the importance of diversification, bringing guests from various fields to expand the conversation of how consciousness is influencing every area of the human experience. From AI, bio-hacking, entertainment, or entrepreneurship, the human experience is being shaped in new ways, and this information is a guide to navigate this new world in a productive, collectively uplifting, and unified way. “Without open dialog, this unity is impossible,” adds Georgia.

Episodes move between fascinating discussions and channeled cultural analysis, covering themes such as heart-centered consciousness, manifestation, and even a cosmic perspective on hot topics and politics. That diversity makes the show a practical crossroads where theory meets lived consequence, in a relatable way with a splash of humor.

The program is candid about common barriers: fear of judgment, confusion about where to start, and uncertainty about whom to trust amid a crowded field of teachers. The hosts often point to yoga’s growth, from cultural taboo to mainstream wellness, as a historical parallel. “The world has opened its eyes to the tremendous benefits of Yoga. Today, Spiritual and energetic healing are on a similar trajectory,” says Georgia. “Lowering entry thresholds is essential for wider adoption. By having these conversations openly, we reduce judgment and normalize the concepts so everyone can benefit, not just the few. That is what the podcast is doing.”

Ultimately, Spread Your Third Eye has served as a heart-centered, embodied consciousness as a pathway to both private healing and systemic change. Moreover, it demonstrates how small, repeatable practices can ripple outward. “My guides told me early on that this work is here to help the planet, and we were asked to answer that call,” Georgia shares. “When you witness these practices transform ordinary lives, you want to bring that possibility to more people,” Mia adds.

As the podcast moves into its second year, it invites listeners to experiment, learn from it, and carry small embodied practices into family rooms and boardrooms. “Once you see it change someone’s life, you feel compelled to share it,” Mia states.