It has taken me a long time to write how I feel about our dear Carrie Jost…
Founder of Creative Kinesiology, founding member of the Kinesiology federation, Medicine person…
Friend, teacher, mentor, loving presence and champion of this particular rough diamond.
Here are my inadequate words, added to her book of memories, completed this week.
“Dear Carrie,
It’s taken me a long time write this. It feels way too soon to have words to say about how much you’ve impacted my life. We had so much more to do together.
Every single day I wake up grateful to have known you, to have loved you, to have been challenged by you, to have been seen by you and to have been loved by you.
We were lucky to connect both with our love of science and it’s new discoveries, and our commitment to deep healing and bringing beauty to the world.
A real blessing.
Our journey started when my now 30 year old was 7 and you were teaching doing this crazy thing called touch for health, the very last course that you ever taught, and I was hooked.
Training continued with you over many many years. Then becoming one of your teaching team, then on the CK management team, then director with CK in 2020. And in 2023 we worked so closely together, with Sal too, to find ways for your legacy to continue so that you could rest. Our time as a team of 3 caretakers with our overalls!
Little did we know.
And although I love kinesiology as you know, the revelations happened in the medicine healing circles, where it was a privilege to be your right hand woman. The way we worked in unison, knowing what was next, language with no words. This changed my life in ways I’m only just beginning to know a little of.
Thank you for bearing with me through my ‘teenager’ spiritual years, I was a right ole pain. And your big heart, and lovin gaze (plus strong feedback now and again) helped me through.
So much love to you as you journey onwards. You have left so many gifts in this world, may they benefit as many as can be reached.
With more love than one heart can bare, and deep gratitude.
Sarah-Jayne, AHLW”