By: Elena Mart
Leanne Rose never imagined her life would look like this. As a registered mental health nurse and psychotherapist, she spent years grounded in science, dedicated to helping people understand and manage their emotional well-being. But even with all the credentials and the clinical experience, something inside her felt incomplete.
“I had been using every tool I knew,” she recalls. “Therapy. Journaling. Talking about it. But I wasn’t getting better. It was like I was keeping myself in the loop of the same story.”
That internal dissonance sparked a turning point. Leanne didn’t abandon everything she’d learned—far from it. She simply began listening to something else, too: the quiet voice inside her that hinted there might be more to healing than what could be measured on a chart.
That voice grew louder. It didn’t offer clear-cut answers or easy formulas. Instead, it invited her to explore a side of herself that felt unprofessional, unproven, and deeply personal. It invited her into the spiritual.
Today, Leanne Rose is known as an internationally recognized psychotherapist and Embodied Source Channel who merges clinical psychology with spiritual insight. Through her signature modality, Embodied Source Channeling, she supports people in transforming the way they see themselves and their lives. Her clients include Hollywood actresses, bestselling authors, and high-achieving entrepreneurs. But her path to this point wasn’t without hesitation.
“Coming out publicly as a channel was terrifying,” she says. “Professionally, it felt like career suicide. But I couldn’t keep hiding it. The gift had changed my life. I believed it could offer something meaningful for others.”

Leanne’s work isn’t about psychic predictions or esoteric ceremonies. It’s about helping people shift the story they’re living from. Through channeling, she guides clients into a new understanding of themselves—one that encourages them to see themselves as creators, not just participants in life. The impact can be a profound personal transformation.
“When people change their self-concept,” Leanne explains, “many things shift. Relationships can heal. Opportunities often appear. Confidence tends to grow. They start showing up differently, and the world often responds.”
Her approach blends the rigor of her clinical background with the softness of spiritual guidance. It’s this integration that sets her work apart. She’s not abandoning science; she’s expanding its reach.
“A lot of people talk about ‘co-creating with the universe,’ but they’re still waiting for life to deliver something,” she says. “I help people move from waiting to creating. We are not separate from Source. We can embody it.”
That belief forms the foundation of what she now calls the “We Are God” movement—a growing collective of people learning to live with intention, joy, and creative agency. It’s not about ego, she clarifies. It’s about responsibility. “When you recognize your own power, you stop outsourcing it. That’s when meaningful change can begin.”
But her message isn’t only for the spiritual community. With a master’s in psychotherapy and over a decade of experience in mental health, Leanne is equally passionate about bridging the gap between evidence-based care and holistic transformation. She points to growing fields like transpersonal psychology and somatic healing as examples that this integration is gaining traction.
“People are craving more than symptom management,” she says. “They want to feel alive again. They want meaning. They want to explore whether there’s a purpose to their pain.”
Leanne knows that kind of transformation isn’t always comfortable. She’s faced criticism from both traditional mental health professionals and members of the spiritual community for her views on abundance, leadership, and healing. But she doesn’t shy away from the tension.
“I’m not here to please everyone,” she says. “I’m here to speak to the people who are ready for something more.”
Her journey illustrates that honoring your inner voice—even when it challenges everything you thought you knew—can lead to unexpected outcomes. When she left behind the structure of the healthcare system, she didn’t have a roadmap. She had a calling. That calling has since grown into a thriving business, a global movement, and a message that resonates far beyond the confines of therapy rooms or retreat centers.

She sees herself not just as a coach or healer, but as someone holding a mirror. “I don’t fix people,” she says. “I help them recognize what’s already inside them. And once they see it, they rarely go back.”
Looking ahead, Leanne is building what she envisions as one of the largest manifestation memberships in the world. She dreams of stages filled with people learning to trust themselves again. She imagines a future where healing doesn’t start with fixing, but with remembering.
“We’re not broken,” she says. “We’ve just forgotten who we are.”
Her work is a reminder that transformation doesn’t always look the way we expect. Sometimes, it begins with a whisper. And sometimes, that whisper becomes the foundation of everything new.
Learn more at www.leannerosegalayla.com or follow Leanne on Instagram @iamleannerose.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and inspirational purposes only. It does not constitute professional medical or psychological advice. Individual experiences with psychotherapy, spiritual practices, or alternative healing methods may vary. Readers seeking mental health support should consult a licensed healthcare professional.