The Hotel with a History
A True Story of Spiritual Discernment and Boundaries
In 2014, I received an unusual request from a hotel in Washington, D.C. Management had tried everything—renovations, repairs, new ownership—andyet the problems persisted. Flooding. Electrical failures. Constant malfunctions. It was as if the building itself was resisting.
They wanted me to do a spiritual clearing.
I walked the space. I listened.
And I said I would consider it.
That night, Spirit spoke clearly—in a dream.
I was shown the weight of the energy within that structure. Not just one spirit, but many. The message came swiftly and strongly:
You do not have the authority here.
The dream wasn’t just symbolic. It was a warning. I saw unrest, sorrow, and resistance. I was shown what would happen if I tried to intervene where I had no spiritual jurisdiction. The burden wouldn’t just be mine—it would ripple outward. I woke up knowing what I had to do.
I respectfully declined the job.
Later, I learned that the hotel had been constructed during the Civil Rights Movement—an era thick with struggle and injustice, especially in D.C. I can’t prove what’s beneath that foundation, but I trust what Spirit revealed: some pain is embedded too deeply for ritual alone to resolve. Some places don’t need a ceremony—they need acknowledgment, truth, and time.
The hotel has changed names. But the reviews?
They still mention flooding. Strange electrical failures. An unexplainable energy.
Spiritual Takeaway
This isn’t a ghost story. It’s a spiritual science story—one about discernment, respect, and knowing when to walk away. Not every haunting is your calling. Not every space is yours to heal.
Sometimes, the most sacred act of service is to listen—and step aside.
— Rev. Starlene Joyner Burns
National Spiritual Science Center Historical Society
🗂 Filed Under:
Spiritual Science | Ministerial Discernment | Occult Washington | Metaphysical Teachings | NSSC History