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Meet Kevin Audley

Today we’d like to introduce you to Kevin Audley.

Hi Kevin, can you start by introducing yourself? We’d love to learn more about how you got to where you are today?
I had one question in my head when I left the hospital: “How did I survive that fall and why am I still here?”

The first week of school at the University of Kansas is called Country Club Week. Back on August 23rd, 1985, my job before our party at Kappa Sigma fraternity was to go pick up as many people as possible from the dorms to bring to the house.

Plenty of kegs were on hand, but also trashcans full of Kool-Aid spiked with grain alcohol. Mom raised us on Kool-Aid, so I drank a lot of it. Later that night (from what I was told), I decided to get out on the roof with a female companion. The guy on the fire escape saw me fly by – going off the edge of the roof into a forward roll. I landed on the cement 2 ½ stories below.

It’s three in the morning, and the local hospital in Lawrence quickly realizes my head injuries are too severe for them to treat. I go by ambulance to the University of Kansas Medical Center some 45 minutes away. Dad later told me the ambulance driver called ahead to say “I don’t think he is going to make it.”

I remember one thing from my week in intensive care: The doctor said “you are very lucky to be alive.” I decided to find out why. My conclusion: “I don’t know why I am still here, but God must have left me here to do something special.”

I started studying and took my 2.2 GPA to an eventual 4.0 and decided to go on to graduate school in counseling. Helping people must be my purpose. I end up with a Master’s degree and spent a lot of my early work helping people with disabilities and mental illness change their thinking to allow them to cope with life.

I quickly realized the tools I had learned in my graduate program were not helping my clients move past their problems. People with depression and anxiety who said they wanted to feel better were not making progress. Something was holding them back. I began to search for other modalities that might reach a deeper level – the subconscious mind.

The Subconscious Blueprint is the outcome of that search. I facilitate a process where my clients create a detailed picture of what they want to attract in their life and download it into the subconscious mind. The process utilizes left brain/right brain integration strategies to create alignment between the conscious wishes and desires and the subconscious mind. It is a quick and effective way to reprogram the software of the mind.

My clients quickly see changes and the process is life-changing.

Can you talk to us a bit about the challenges and lessons you’ve learned along the way? Looking back would you say it’s been easy or smooth in retrospect?
I was raised by a single mother with five kids.

In spite of our financial situation, I went to school with some very wealthy students and college was a given. Mom signed me up and my student loans and work at the grocery store helped me make it through.

The biggest struggle with the Subconscious Blueprint is the fact that the process is somewhat contrary to traditional counseling. Instead of going backward, handing out a diagnosis, and focusing on the problem, this process focuses on solutions both now and in the future.

Thanks – so what else should our readers know about your work and what you’re currently focused on?
My fall off the roof had a huge impact on my life. I have worked in many different settings and with different populations and I firmly believe I can work with anyone.

I pride myself on having a genuine concern for my clients and I am living my reason for being. God did leave me here for a reason and I am able to quickly help people change their overall conclusions about themselves and life in general.

The cool thing about what I do is I merely facilitate the process that allows them to finally accept themselves right now – letting go of the conditions they bought into long ago.

We all have a different way of looking at and defining success. How do you define success?
Scientists have calculated the probability of being born to our parents in time in space.

We reportedly have a 1 in 400 trillion chance of being born. You might say we were born a miracle.

I define my success as helping others remember their innate value and let go of some of the social conditioning that led them to believe otherwise.

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1 Comment

  1. Michael Audley

    July 22, 2022 at 2:10 am

    Priceless perspective Kevin Scott.

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