Defining “Reiki”

In English, Reiki is often translated as “universal life force energy” or “spiritually guided life force energy.” While this gives us a doorway into understanding, the original Japanese kanji offers something much deeper — a story, not just a definition.

霊 (Rei) does not only mean “spiritual.” In kanji, it carries the sense of the unseen, the sacred laws of the universe, and the divine that cannot be grasped by the mind alone. It suggests guidance from the greater whole — something vast and intelligent that moves through all of existence.

気 (Ki) represents the same essence known as Qi in Chinese medicine, Prana in Ayurveda, or Chi in martial arts — the vital life force that flows through all beings, the breath of life itself.

Together, these two characters reveal the heart of Reiki: the union of divine guidance and life force energy. Reiki reminds us that this energy — this current that animates and sustains everything — is not separate from us. It is the very essence of existence itself. Some may call it Source, God, Spirit, the Universe, or the Most High — but whatever name we give it, it is the same living force, flowing through and as all that is.

When we practice Reiki healing, we’re not “creating” or “sending” anything new — we are consciously opening to this universal current and allowing it to move through us. Because it is guided by the intelligence of the greater whole, it flows naturally to where it’s needed most — restoring balance, dissolving blockages, releasing tension, and awakening the body’s innate capacity to heal on every level: physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual.

Reiki is not separate from you — it is you. It’s the sacred energy that weaves all of life together, a reminder that we are not isolated beings but threads in one vast, intelligent flow.