About
Beyond-Energy Center: The Living Breath of Creation
The name came through spirit: Beyond Energy—the place beyond the skin, beyond the body, beyond the visible.
Where soul, ancestry, water, light, and earth speak the same language again.
It is the bridge between, physical healing and spiritual remembering, cultural memory and future awakening, and the seen and unseen worlds.
Everything here—human, animal, water, stone, and spirit—works together to return people to themselves.

The Story of Ka-Te Kitchi-Honiahaka-Hania
Ka-Te’s gifts spoke before words ever did.
Adopted as a child, she began seeing visions at four—hearing nature’s whispers, feeling spirit move like wind through bone. The people who raised her never told her who she was, but her blood remembered.
In time, truth revealed itself: Navajo, Apache, Middle Eastern, Egyptian, West African, and Asian lineages—an ancient genetic tapestry reaching back to the first peoples. Neanderthal blood runs in her veins, one of Earth’s oldest. Her ancestry was not a mix; it was a return—a reawakening of memory written in spirit.
She always knew how to listen.
To the animals.
To the land.
To the ancestors who never stopped speaking.
Through years of study, Ka-Te earned two Doctorate degrees, ministerial ordination across traditions, and mastery of Native and African spiritual systems. Yet her truest education came from the unseen. Her journey was never about becoming; it was about remembering what she already was.
That remembering became her mission—to create Beyond Energy Center, a sanctuary for those who seek to heal, to remember, and to come home to themselves.

The Vision and the Calling
As a single mother of three, Ka-Te built this sanctuary with her own hands and faith. Against racial division, financial struggle, and spiritual resistance, she refused to give up. Each obstacle became part of the sacred design.
Beyond-Energy stands as proof that belief and courage can reshape the world. It is a place for community, for ancestral honoring, for healing through nature, art, ceremony, and movement. It is a temple of unity, love, harmony, and freedom.
True spirituality is not about separation or perfection — it is about service. It is about caring for the land, tending the animals, honoring the ancestors, and helping humanity remember its divine origin.

THE STORY OF THE LAND
Before Ka-Te spoke its name, the land spoke to her.
In vision came three ancestors: an Elder in a white wolf headdress, his warrior son, and the son after him.
They called this place Wolf Land—maiitsoh in Diné (Navajo).
They gave her the name Kitchi-Honiahaka-Hania, Brave Little Wolf Spirit Warrior.
This is not a business location.
It is a living archive—100 acres of breathing history: a 1600s graveyard, a Revolutionary War encampment, 1900s train rails tied to freedom routes, battlefield soil, sacred ponds, and healing pastures.
Here stand horse rescues, apothecary gardens, sound and light therapy sanctuaries, and the Iron Warrior fields.
This land is a classroom, a temple, a living museum.
Here, history is not read.
Here, history is felt.




