"End of Slavery Summit" on BrightU: Stephanie MoDavis discusses healthcare's fatal flaw
By jacobthomas // 2025-08-07
 
  • On Day 9 of the "End of Slavery Summit," Stephanie MoDavis, a lupus survivor and founder of Awakening Healthcare, recalled how she nearly died due to repeated misdiagnoses and medical gaslighting, exposing systemic flaws in healthcare.
  • She argued that healthcare's critical failure is dismissing intuition, empathy and lived experience, feminine qualities essential for healing.
  • MoDavis emphasized that many healthcare providers were themselves traumatized, burned out and struggling, perpetuating a cycle of dysfunction.
  • Her solution: integrated feminine wisdom (experience, connection) with masculine science (objectivity, experimentation) to restore balance in medicine and institutions.
  • Transformation required those harmed by the system, patients and struggling providers, to drive change, rebuilding from self-love and trauma-informed care.
On Day 9 of the "End of Slavery Summit," aired on August 3, Stephanie MoDavis, a metaphysician, trauma mentor and founder of Awakening Healthcare, shared her harrowing journey through a medical system that nearly killed her before teaching her its deepest wounds. MoDavis, a survivor of systemic lupus, organ failure and medical gaslighting, argued that healthcare's fatal flaw is its rejection of the feminine principle: intuition, empathy and lived experience. "I was misdiagnosed six times. By the time they labeled my disease, I was on death's door at 21," she recounted. "Doctors told me, 'We don't know what else to do for you.' Meanwhile, I was the one teaching them how to listen." MoDavis' revelation? The system's obsession with objectivity has erased the wisdom of those who've endured its failures. She now trained "subjective experiencers," patients-turned-mentors who guide others (and even physicians) through trauma integration. "Doctors who haven't done their own trauma work are doomed to fail their patients," she said. "They're trained out of their feminine side, the ability to hold space, to intuit, to connect. The hospital operates like a high school: infantile dynamics, no trust, just ego." Her work exposed a chilling paradox: The very professionals tasked with healing are often the most broken. "I've had providers reach out 'for their patients,' then admit they were the ones drowning. They're self-medicating, divorcing, collapsing under burnout. COVID didn't break healthcare, it ripped the bandage off a festering wound." MoDavis' critique extended beyond medicine. She ties the system's dysfunction to statism, natural law and the suppression of feminine energy in all institutions. "We comply with harm because we're traumatized into obedience. But if you're enslaved internally, codependent and unhealed, how can you fight external slavery?" Her solution is a "sacred feminine renaissance," not as a rejection of science, but as its necessary counterpart. "The masculine has experiments; the feminine has experience. We need both. Right now, hospitals are all scalpel, no soul." Healing the system requires those it has harmed. "The people ready to listen are the ones suffering, the doctors crying in their cars, the patients abandoned by protocols. They're the ones who'll force medicine to evolve." As MoDavis put it: "You can't troubleshoot toxicity forever. You have to rebuild from first principles, starting with self-love."

More from Day 9 of the "End of Slavery Summit"

Day 9 of the "End of Slavery Summit" doesn't end thereHere's a summary of the topics tackled by other speakers: Mark discussed:
  • The distinction between being a "state national" or "state citizen" versus a "U.S. citizen." 
  • How birth certificates, legal terminology (e.g., "person" vs. "man") and corporate structures (e.g., the U.S. as a corporation) trick individuals into contractual obligations, stripping them of sovereignty.
  • Why are assemblies, voluntary groups that are reconstructing land-jurisdiction governance where power flows from individuals to counties/states, not top-down.
  • How the Civil War enabled corporate usurpation of American governance through three constitutions (for American, British and Papal service providers). He argued post-war chaos allowed maritime law to replace common law, inverting rightful authority.
  • How correcting political status, withdrawing consent from corporate systems and using assemblies can restore lawful order.
Ken Bartle discussed:
  • How his research into human consciousness and biology led him to uncover 20 governing principles of natural law, which he described as spiritual values embedded in human nature. 
  • How is consciousness a cyclical, value-driven process involving both cognitive and subconscious minds. Bartle emphasized that understanding this process allows individuals to align their actions with natural law for personal and societal benefit.
  • Why does freedom begin with individual self-mastery, not collective systems. He detailed exercises (like his "3-minute visualization") to reprogram the subconscious mind, stressing that internal change radiates outward to inspire broader societal transformation.
  • Why statist systems are incompatible with natural law. Bartle highlighted how ruling elites suppress awareness of natural law to maintain control, but individuals can reclaim autonomy by recognizing their inherent freedom.
  • Why region-specific common law (e.g., U.S. vs. U.K.) and universal natural law is rooted in human biology and consciousness. He advocated returning to natural law as the foundation for a free society, dismissing man-made legal systems as inherently oppressive.

Want to know more?

If you are ready to break the chains that bind you now, skip the wait and unlock instant access to all episodes and bonus content with the "End of Slavery Summit" package hereThis is your chance to watch on your terms, at your pace–no delays, no censorship, no compromise. Because when it comes to freedom, why wait, when you can wake up now? Upon purchase, you will get instant and unlimited access to all "End of Slavery Summit" episodes, curated learning tools, 30 unique speaker gifts, 27 bonus videos from host Cory Endrulat, essential bonus eBooks, 60 clips from "The Liberator 2 Showcase Event Community Wisdom" and printable graphics and ads you can use to share the message. Sources include: BrighteonUniversity.com 1 BrightU.com BrighteonUniversity.com 2