If you’re asking whether this community is tied to a specific religion or spiritual tradition, that question is a sign of discernment, not suspicion — it usually comes from someone who has wandered through enough rooms to know that the wrong container can quietly cost you more than the right one gives you. You’ve done the work. You’ve sat in circles, read the books, sampled the lineages, and you’ve learned to listen for the moment a teacher starts asking you to leave your own knowing at the door. So let me answer plainly, and then say a little more about why the answer is the way it is.
The short answer: no. miraclesfor.me is not affiliated with any religion, church, lineage, guru, denomination, or single spiritual tradition. There’s no scripture you have to accept, no teacher you have to revere, no initiation, no vows, no required language about source or god or the universe. You don’t have to call anything by a particular name to belong here.
What we actually are
We’re a community for conscious entrepreneurs with adverse childhood experiences — people who are building businesses while also carrying the patterns childhood adversity tends to install. The work we do sits at the meeting point of three things: the inner game (nervous system, identity, the patterns that quietly run your decisions), the outer game (offers, pricing, visibility, money, marketing), and the alignment between them.
That work draws on a few different bodies of knowledge — trauma-informed approaches like the ACE research, somatic and nervous-system tools, business and marketing frameworks, and yes, some teachings that have roots in contemplative traditions because they happen to describe how human beings actually work. But none of it is presented as doctrine. It’s presented as a set of practical lenses you can pick up, test, and keep only if it earns its keep in your life.
Where the “spiritual” question usually comes from
People ask this question for two very different reasons, and both deserve a real answer.
Some readers grew up inside a tradition that left a mark — a high-control church, a community that punished doubt, a household where religion was a weapon rather than a refuge. For those readers, the worry is: am I about to walk into something that will quietly ask me to hand over my discernment again? The answer is no. There is no inner circle here, no required belief, no teacher you have to defer to in order to belong. Disagreement is welcome. Skepticism is welcome. Atheists, agnostics, humanists, and people who simply don’t want spirituality in their business room all fit here without having to perform anything they don’t actually believe.
Other readers come from the opposite direction — they’re deeply spiritual, they’ve done years of practice in a particular tradition, and they want to know whether this community is going to clash with their path or quietly try to convert them to a different one. The answer there is also no. Whatever lineage you’ve been formed by — Christian, Buddhist, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, indigenous, pagan, secular-but-spiritual, none-of-the-above — the work here is designed to sit underneath your worldview, not replace it. We talk about patterns, nervous systems, identity, money, and visibility. You bring the meaning-making.
Why we keep it that way on purpose
It would honestly be easier, from a marketing standpoint, to pick a flavour and lean into it. Communities that pick a single spiritual aesthetic tend to grow faster, because the dog whistle is louder. But the audience we actually serve — conscious entrepreneurs with adverse childhood experiences — almost always shows up with a complicated relationship to belief. Many were over-spiritualised as kids in ways that bypassed real pain. Others were under-spiritualised and had to find their own way later. A lot are somewhere in between, holding a quiet, personal practice that doesn’t fit any pre-made box.
If we forced everyone into one frame, half the people who’d most benefit from the work would have to leave their own knowing at the door to enter — and that’s the exact pattern many of us are here to unlearn. So we don’t.
The frameworks we teach (GPS+I, CLARITI, the 6-Layer Model, the Three Pillars) are described in plain language. You can translate any of them into the spiritual vocabulary you already use, or strip the spiritual vocabulary out entirely and treat them as psychology and systems thinking. Both work. Members do both.
A few honest specifics, so you know what you’re walking into
Because vagueness on this question isn’t fair, here’s what to actually expect inside the space:
- No prayer, no required rituals, no mandatory meditation practice.
- No teacher worship. David is the founder and shows up as a peer who happens to have built the curriculum — not as a guru.
- No required language. You can say “God,” “source,” “the field,” “my higher self,” “my nervous system,” “my subconscious,” or nothing at all. All of it is fine.
- No conversion attempts. Nobody is going to message you about their tradition. If that ever happens, it gets handled.
- Yes, members come from many spiritual backgrounds, and yes, some of the language in the deeper teachings touches on consciousness, energy, and meaning — because for many members, those are real categories. You’re never required to share that frame to participate.
If you’re someone who finds the word “spiritual” useful, you’ll find plenty of fellow travellers here. If you find it allergenic, you’ll find people who avoid it entirely and still get enormous value from the business and inner-work side of the curriculum. Both can be true in the same room without anyone having to pretend.
The deeper question underneath the question
Often, when someone asks whether a community is affiliated with a tradition, the real question underneath is: will I have to give up part of myself to belong here? The honest answer is no. The work asks you to look honestly at your patterns and your business — it does not ask you to adopt anyone else’s cosmology in order to do that. If you want to explore related concerns, you might find the question about whether this is evidence-based or purely spiritual useful, or the one on why community works for this kind of work without becoming a cult.
If after all this you’d like to see the room with your own eyes before deciding anything, you’re welcome to look inside the community here, read what members are actually saying, and notice whether the tone matches what you’ve read on this page. No pressure, no rush — just an open door, with your discernment fully intact when you walk through it.
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