Merry Christmas & Happy Holidays
THE FIELD NOTES
Key Takeaways
Peace originates in the places we’d prefer to avoid.
Healing requires courage over comfort.
Light reveals what needs repair.
Observation
Christmas arrives wrapped in the language of light and peace. Each year, we return to familiar scenes of warmth and softness. In remembering Christmas from the Christian perspective, there is a passage from the Bible (Luke 2:29–32), where a holy man blesses the infant Jesus acknowledging Him as the salvation and light. But just a few lines later (Luke 2:34–35), he adds a warning we rarely hear at Christmas: salvation will bring division, and the truth of many hearts will be revealed. When we hold this message as story rather than scripture, the pattern is familiar. Healing doesn’t mean comfort. It uncovers what needs to be seen before peace can take root.
That tension shows up often in my work. Clients come wanting immediate relief, clarity, and wholeness. What they don’t expect is that healing can begin with disruption. Old memories percolating to the surface. The slow roar of dormant feelings begins to emerge. Old patterns rooted in survival are finally confronted and questioned. It can look (and feel) like things are getting worse when we’re finally moving toward what is true.
Revelation
A surgeon cannot restore what’s failing without first seeing what’s beneath the surface. Even the gentlest intervention requires full visibility. The anatomy and its pathology must be revealed before anything can be repaired. The same happens in our inner world. We want peace, but we often want it without the discomfort required to reach it.
In clinical spaces, I’ve supported clients stepping bravely into this moment. Hoping for ease and calm, they’re met instead with the truth–their pain and suffering–they’ve been carrying for years. Truth isn’t punishment; it’s the first step toward relief. I know this from my own life as well. My journey to wholeness started with something I didn’t want to acknowledge. A pain finally named, and a suffering that began to resolve. The turning point came only when I stopped trying to protect myself from the truth and let it do its work.
Meaning
This is the heart of the Soul Surgeon metaphor for me. Healing is not passive. It’s an act of care that may start with discomfort but moves toward wholeness. Light isn’t only something that warms; it also reveals. My signature, “with love and light” speaks to both. Love reminds us of what is infinite within us. Light reveals the truth about our purpose and meaning. Together, they invite a peace that grows from integrity and lived truth.
As we move through the holidays and into a new year, this feels like the work ahead. Not the pursuit of ease, but the pursuit of truth that makes real peace possible.
What to Carry Forward
Let the season’s light illuminate what needs care, not just what feels good.
Choose the kind of peace that grows from honesty, not avoidance.
Reflection
What truth is asking for your attention so you can step toward real peace?
With love & light,
John Moos, MD
Soul Surgeon