Divine Guidance
Your current spiritual practice might occur within the framework of an organized religion, or as private individual meditation. Whatever the structure, taking charge can enhance that practice.

One way you invoke a spiritual presence into your life is by asking yourself: "Why am I here?" Another is to ask the Divine for a new car. No level of prayer is right or wrong, but examining the quality of your prayer life can bring you to look beyond your own own personal self--toward something more intelligent and powerful. Whether you refer to the Divine as God, Great Spirit, Allah or Christ, seeking divine guidance means to stop asking for "things" and start asking for what really matters: trust, patience, faith, endurance, gratitude, acceptance and love.

When you step up the the plate with the Divine, be prepared to have your life reordered and false voices taken away. Distractions can be eliminated and you might be left only with the clear voice of divinity. More realistically, when this voice speaks--often in unexpected ways--it can leave you confused and unsure of what you really want. Additionally, it might be months, even years, before you're aware that the Divine has spoken to you.

There are four stages you'll move through as you bring a spiritual presence into your life:

Separation
Dark Night of the Soul
Light
Appreciation
While the stages often occur sequentially, they don't necessarily have to, in fact you might not even recognize them until all is said and done. It happens with the big things in life, and with the seemingly insignificant.

Separation
When you tell the Divine that you want false voices--people, situations and influences that distract you from the truth--out of your life, you can expect the world as you know it to change. As you move away from the mundane to assuming that you have a mission, you may find yourself separated from false voices, and feeling like a stranger in a strange land.

You are beginning to unplug from the human laws of cause and effect: "If I go to school, I'll get a great job; if I find the right partner I'll be happy forever." As you detach from this level of human order, you are energetically detaching from the world of human reasoning and may longer know who or what to trust. You can expect sadness, even depression, as this process unfolds. It's a necessary element in your progression.

Dark Night of the Soul
A dark night of the soul is when you feel lost, ungrounded and abandoned. Many people assume, and often mistake, the dark night for depression, or that it emerges into one's life following an emotional crisis, such as divorce. But a dark night will often enter a person's life in the midst of their most joyous time.

It is always profound but not necessarily catastrophic, and it provides an opportunity to hear the voice of guidance.You may begin to meditate, read spiritual material, or become a vegetarian, and now you feel your efforts should be rewarded. When that doesn't happen, you experience the breakdown of your concepts of the Divine, which always includes the core of your expectations of the Divine. Don't make the mistake of thinking that the mystical path is the same as a spiritual practice. Mysticism is an all-consuming relationship with the Divine. It is essential to understand the need to develop the consciousness to tell the difference between high-voltage guidance and your own personal ambition.

Look closely at the quality of your prayer life: Are you expecting God to solve problems that you should already have solutions to? Are you asking the Divine to take away the mysteries of your life, rather than trying to learn their lessons? The journey is not about controlling what you get, but embracing whatever comes. Realize that no matter which cards you are dealt, you'll be guided to the lessons you need to experience. Your job is to master your responses to external events, not attempt to control them.

Light
The next stage of your spiritual journey occurs when the light comes back on, or when the darkness begins to dismantle. This is not necessarily a series of profound visions or a bolt of lightning, but simply a sense of not feeling lost anymore. You have accepted that the goal is not to stop or interfere with movement and change, but to go along with it.

Appreciation
The final stage of the journey -- and the stage to live in -- is appreciation or gratitude. You take life as it is. You no longer need the Divine to give you what you think you want, but rather you are grateful for what you do have. Guidance is always there, just not always in the form of your expectations. Appreciating life becomes your spiritual practice.

Author's Bio: 

Caroline grew up in the Chicago area, with her parents, two siblings and close extended family. Raised a Catholic, she attended Mother Guerin High School. After graduating from St. Mary of the Woods College in Indiana, Caroline returned to the Chicago area to pursue a career in journalism. As a freelance writer, she attended a seminar of Elizabeth Kubler-Ross and was thrown into a “crisis of meaning”. Inspired, she attended Mundelein College and received a Masters Degree in theology. Heading east, she started the Stillpoint Publishing Company. It was during this time in New Hampshire that she acknowledged for the first time her medical intuitive abilities. As Caroline says “I had all the ambition in the world to be a publisher and all the talent to be a medical intuitive”. She started working with holistic doctors, co-authored The Creation of Health, began creating audiotapes and lectured around the world. She soon left New Hampshire and returned to Chicago.

Working in her mother’s den, Caroline wrote Anatomy of the Spirit, a New York Times best-seller. She credits all the loving attention and care given her by her mom and dear aunt for getting her through the process of writing that book. A year later, she wrote Why People Don’t Heal and How They Can, which also became a best-seller. Currently she is working on her next book, Sacred Contracts.

Caroline’s teacher archetype continues to be alive and well as evidenced by the lectures, seminars, workshops and educational programs she is involved with.

You can visit her site at http://www.myss.com.