Showing posts with label Medicine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medicine. Show all posts

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Soul Medicine and Spiritual Quantum Physics

SOUL MEDICINE

We are in the Age of Aquarius with its new paradigm for healing. This paradigm is energy healing using your mind and soul as your guiding tools.

We have about 1950 more years in this 2000 year age. Several Aquarian Age healers or what I like to call 'pioneers' have already made their mark on the world sc?ne with their healing techniques.

Most of them have 'blinked back' into the Quantum Ocean awaiting their turn to 'blink back out' again into a new incarnation.

Hahnemann, Bach, Dinshah, Schuessler and Eeman are a few of the better known healing pioneers who await their next assignment.

We have several other pioneers still walking the planet, one in particular living in Arizona, Eric Rolf who I would like to tell you a little about.

He has written a book called "Soul Medicine, the Anti-Medicine of Creative Cause and Inner Listening." It may turn out to be the most efficient healing system of our time.

The only illness that Soul Medicine recognizes is a kind of 'spiritual deafness.'

Soul Medicine provides a secret body code relating each organ both inner and outer with specific areas of your life. Soul Medicine is your passport to living a new healthy, exciting, creative life.

Let me tell you how Eric helped me! Last year I slipped on the ice in front of my home in frigid Pennsylvania. I cracked my head pretty good. Since I am a firm believer that nothing happens by accident (an accident is the effect of a cause you have forgotten) I called Eric and asked him why did he think I hurt myself like that?

We discussed things over the phone and he came up with a date. I mentally traced my life back to that date and discovered that at age fifteen I had cracked my head in a similar 'accident'.

I was running in the high school gym doing laps around the track which was suspended above the gym floor. When I was finished running I tried to leap over the railing that led to the door leading downstairs.

My toe caught the railing and I crashed onto the concrete hitting my head in the same spot I did last year.

But that was not the cause it was the effect. We dug further and found out the cause was my continued anger at my father. He and I have been 'banging heads' ever since I can remember. It finally drove me out of my home at 18 and into the Army.

So this particular cause and effect accident lay buried in my subconscious till last year when I was in my 70's. Then what goes around comes around. Repeated accident!

It was time to forgive my father and let all the anger go. Since I wasn't doing this voluntarily my soul gave me a gentle reminder and I cracked my head. Remember this it said?

Thanks to Eric and his "Soul Medicine" paradigm I finally resolved this hidden cause and effect time bomb.

All accidents, all pains and injuries are caused to ourselves by us. Our souls know the causes. Get into the habit of asking your soul to tell you the cause and it will as sure as God made little green apples.

If you get a chance read "Soul Medicine" by Eric Rolf. It is truly an Aquarian Age healing paradigm. Look him up on the net and email him.


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Saturday, May 21, 2011

Holistic Medicine - What Is It?

If you asked ten people what their definition of holistic medicine was, there is a good likelihood that you would receive almost as many answers as people you asked! Holistic medicine encompasses an entire realm of various forms of preventative measures and healing techniques that focus on the mind, body and spirit as cooperative parts of the system we call "life."

Holistic Medicine as a System of Care

At heart, and when practiced with best intent, holistic medicine is a complete system of health care that is based on complete cooperation with everyone involved - from patients, to doctors, to therapists and helpers of every level. The goal of this type of system is not to make more money for corporations that manufacture pharmaceuticals, nor is it to make insurance companies more attractive to investors.

Instead, a holistic health system of care fosters an environment of compassion and wholeness. In addition, traditional and modern medical practices come together to create a system intended to create optimal health, rather than simply treat illness.

While holistic medicine was pooh-poohed for a time, it is quickly becoming a more popular system of care than those systems that are based solely on modern medicine - and that's a great thing for everyone!

A Whole-Person Emphasis

When we talk about holistic medicine from the standpoint of a patient, and what kind of treatment options might be introduced, we see that holistic medicine takes the whole person into consideration - not just the part or parts being treated for a specific illness. Physical condition, emotional well being, social values, nutrition and lifestyle, and even spirituality are taken into consideration. The goal is balance and complete well-being, rather than a quick fix or a specific cure.

Accepted Medical Methods

Once again, if you ask ten people what kind of methods are acceptable to holistic medical practitioners, you are likely to get ten different answers! Here are some of the most commonly used terms for popularly accepted methods.
Alternative Medicine - The nickname "Alternative Medicine" often refers to lesser know or less invasive techniques. These include Medical Herbalism and Acupuncture, as well as Homeopathy and Reiki. Today, these time honored systems are becoming more popular, and some are even offered at medical centers that once focused on conventional methods of care.Natural Healing - Mind body spirit healing focuses on non-invasive techniques that rely primarily on the body's ability to heal itself. Many naturopaths combine natural healing with other methods for a whole body approach.Complementary Medicine - Many conventional practitioners refer to homeopathic methods and various holistic practices as "complementary medicine" intended to supplement conventional methods.

Should You Use Holistic Medicine?

Again, the answer to this question depends largely upon who you ask, and how severe an illness you have. Most modern medical practitioners agree that a holistic approach can be extremely helpful, especially for people who really believe that less invasive methods really do work.

When you stop to think about the fact that many so called "Alternative" methods have been used successfully for centuries, and that societies that practice less invasive methods and work toward balance as a rule, rather than simply waiting for an illness to strike and then combating it, tend to have healthier, longer-lived populations, then the concept of holistic medicine really starts to make sense.

Silva Mind Body Healing is a course designed specifically to help with your physical, mental, and emotional health. It encompasses all aspects of your health and takes a holistic approach to your wellbeing.

Using advanced meditations and mental relaxation exercises, Silva Mind Body Healing takes you deep within the Alpha state where it is scientifically proven to stimulate healing and health. If you suffer from constant pain, serious illnesses, stress and anxiety, or simply would like to learn how to heal others and prevent sickness within themselves, this program is for you.

Your mind is a powerful tool. It has the ability to create, solve problems, figure out complex issues, and more importantly it has the ability to heal you. Students of the Silva Mind Body Healing program will discover accelerated healing techniques, how to use positive thought for health, and how to rejuvenate themselves using the Three Scenes Technique. In addition, diet and nutrition are covered so that you know exactly what's going in you at breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Laura_Silva


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Modern Medicine: Healing or Stealing?

A story of commitment:

A long time ago there lived twin brothers, Cosmas and Damian, both of whom were doctors. Trained in Syria they practiced as physicians in the seaport Aegea. Through their work, they attained a great reputation for healing. At some point, though it is unclear how or why, each had a mystical awakening and came to a simultaneous and mutual decision that eventually led them to be known as Cosmas the Moneyless and Damian the Silverless. They were venerated as the "anargyroi," the unmercenary physicians, because they decided to stop charging for their services and to heal purely out of love for God.

They had determined that their abilities as healers were gifts and that they would therefore give them freely and trust that God would provide them with what they needed in order to continue healing the infirm. They traveled throughout Asia Minor and never starved or lacked for anything, although they were brutally tortured and beheaded by order of Lysias for not recanting their beliefs.

That was in the third century.

Now, let me tell you a true story from the 21st century, a more modern counterpoint t in a minor key:

Someone I know who was injured on the job was sent by the Worker's Compensation insurance underwriter to one of their approved rehabilitation physicians. It was a big office, with a full staff, colorful walls, a physical therapy program, a host of diagnostic machines and one doctor.

The patient was examined. The exam, which involved a simple "look-see," an x-ray and a few "walk, sit, bend and stand" commands, at first revealed nothing. Drugs were strongly encouraged, particularly Vicodin, which is a known hazard on a multitude of levels (tendency for addiction, narcotic bowel syndrome, irritability and mood disturbance, motor function disturbance and so on and so forth). They were all refused with the exception of ibuprofen.

Finally, after two months of increasing and relentless pain, the insurance company capitulated and allowed an MRI, which found several bulging discs including an impinged S1. The patient was exhausted, but relieved to know he wasn't crazy. At least the pain had a real etiology. They did other neurologic exams and found moderate to severe neuropathy along one leg, hip and buttock.

Although they continued to press the patient to take more drugs, they allowed physical rehab which entailed deep tissue release. After two months, the patient saw some signs of improvement. So what did they do?

They discontinued treatment, declared the patient at MMI ("maximum medical improvement") and sent him on his merry way with a prescription for whatever he wanted.

When the doctor told the patient that the physical therapy was being withdrawn, the patient sat stunned for a moment. "But that was the only thing that worked," he said. "How can you take that away from me?"

"Yeah," the doctor said, "but it's been too long now and we have to make a determination for the insurance company."

"But you're a doctor!" the patient leaned forward, raising his voice.

"I know. But that's the system," was all the doctor had to say and turned back to his very fashionable computer note pad.

Before the patient left, he looked back and pointed his finger, "No. You're the system!"

The doctor went on to earn a lot of money and live very comfortably. So far he has not been beheaded.

Choices on Becoming A Healer

Why do people go into medicine? Or become social workers? Or psychologists? Or naturopaths and homeopaths? Why go through years of training and gruesome, unpaid clinical internships? Why not go into economics or weapons manufacturing or lobbying?

I know why my father did. He walked back and forth to the NYU medical school uptown campus every day from the north Bronx because he loved medicine. He loved the science of it, the magic of it, the relief it brought to people who were suffering. Now 90 years old and no longer practicing, he still becomes giddy just talking about it, still goes to grand rounds, still reads the journals from front to back, even the ads.

In those early days when I was very little, he got up when there was an emergency, picked up that worn, alligator bag and headed out for a "house call" (imagine that!) at three in the morning. He got paid for his time -- nothing wrong with that. But he didn't worry about what some bureaucrat was going to say about whether it was "warranted" or not. He went because he was needed. Even if it was more hand-holding than anything else.

I am as certain as I can be of anything in this fallen world that my father did not go into medicine to get rich or famous. He didn't have dreams of being on that day's equivalent of Oprah or being hailed as the great new magic man by The New York Times. He never imagined what the insurance companies would do to medicine. He did his job and took care of his family. He worked hard, took jobs sometimes that he didn't like so much and helped people out. As it turned out, we were never poor and that was enough for us.

Now it's a different story. Although I know there are many young people who still have the heart and soul to join Doctors without Borders or head out with the Peace Corps or sign up for clinic jobs with poor, hurting, sick people in small, dusty towns along the southern edge of New Mexico, there are way more who are vying for the top spots in the lucrative specialties (cosmetic surgery, dermatology) that will get them Park Avenue salaries, status and something to really Twitter about.

It's not all their fault, I admit. Expectations about doctors have changed on our parts, too. They're being trained by pharmaceutical companies instead of independent physicians. And we've made the fatal error of setting them up as demi-gods and demanding that they do the impossible. So now (as opposed to when my father had his practice) when something bad happens, we sue them. It's the McDonald's coffee cup syndrome. We stick burning hot coffee between our legs as we drive and then haul everyone but our own poor judgment into court. We eat too much, sit too much and whine too much. Then when we get sick, we want it to go away fast so we can eat too much again. If my father had had a patient like that years ago, he wouldn't have given him a pill. He would've read him the riot act.

What's happened to us? What's happened to doctors?

The Ultimate Disconnect: Doctors as Participating Providers instead of Community Members

The other day a patient told a story of how she got her first kitten. It wasn't anything like what one might expect. As it turned out, her family doctor was over for dinner with his wife and he had found a kitten.

"Your doctor came over for dinner?" I asked, truly surprised.

"Yeah, he always did. He was like part of our family," she sat back with her memory like she was reading a favorite old book.

"He was your doctor and your parents's doctor?" I wondered stupidly.

"Yeah, why?"

The last time I heard about a doctor visiting a patient's house to celebrate a social occasion was the last time I watched "Little House on the Prairie."

In modern practice those boundary crossings are utterly verboten. I know of one social worker (who's really an administrator, not a therapist) who won't even acknowledge a patient in public unless the patient comes up to him first, and even then he's as circumspect as a mouse in a cat house. And I can't remember the last time I was alone with a doctor. In both exams and fully-clothed, open-door consultations, there is always a nurse or assistant present as a live witness to ward off the evil spirits of the legal system.

There are rules and regulations about these things now, privacy laws and confidentiality acts that can put a therapist or doctor in jail for saying the wrong thing at the wrong time.

So, the caution is understandable. But it's also lamentable.

Because a while back I left the cloister and went to see a client walk to receive her master's degree. She invited me to do so and there was no doubt it meant the world to her. In my mind and heart it was the healing and loving thing to do. I could have said "no," that the regulations strictly interpreted limited our interaction to the office and that leaving those four walls could pollute the therapeutic relationship. But I didn't. I went. And we both wept as she got her degree.

To be fair, there are some good reasons for people being careful about leaving a traditional and "safe" setting. Many "healers" have taken terrible advantage of people by forcing unprofessional relationships on them with highly improper dynamics. And I don't just mean sexual ones. I mean ones in which the therapist is the needy one. And people like that sincerely do need lines drawn around them that read: "so far and no farther." But I suspect that we may have gone too far in our carefulness and become fearful. In so doing we may be losing something truly precious -- the healing relationship.

When I think of doctors as part of a community, I once again think of my father and what being a healer means.

It was winter when I was an infant and one of his patients had contracted a bad flu which took a turn for the worse one night. As the story goes, they called in the wee hours of the morning. Without hesitating, my father went to their apartment on Decatur Avenue in the Bronx, where he sat with Harry as his wife, Irene, paced until the fever broke. He sat there all night. Harry lived. Irene never stopped pacing, but she was eternally grateful and thought my father walked on water.

First they came to major family events -- birthdays, funerals and the like. But then they started coming over just to come over. He still took care of them medically. And they lived into their 90's, mostly hale and almost always happy.

It never occurred to anyone in my family -- immediate or extended -- that there was anything untoward or unethical about it. In fact, if that question had even been raised, they would have heard a resounding, "Are you crazy?" from all of us.

Doctors, therapists, priests, rabbis, pastors -- healers and helpers of all sorts -- used to be part of the community and a part of the lives of the people whom they served. They were respected and they were compensated for their time and their help, but they weren't expected to be rich. That was the province of robber barons, railroad men and mining companies. Doctors were expected to be like everyone else in the community. They were a part of it. They certainly weren't the emissaries of insurance companies and corporate boards.

Doctors didn't have to find different churches to attend because one of the congregants came to see them for a yeast infection. It was confidential, the relationship was sacred, yes. But there was other life to live, too. And people did.

In one of my talks on Verbal First Aid, I make a point of bringing up the stethoscope as one of the inventions that truly changed medicine and the art of healing. Because where once the physician had to lay his or her ear on the patient's chest to hear the heart beating, now there was over a foot of distance between them.

In our zealousness and fear, we have substituted machines for people, insurance forms and money for health and inflexible rules for sensible relationships. We have literally taken the heart out of healing.


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Elements of Holistic Medicine Review

The more I live and the more I experience the more I understand what a wonderful creation we live in. Now I'm not going to get into creation, but I want to tell you what I have discovered about Nature and what it can provide us with in relation to healing.

Whether you find see this as new information or whether you have know about the elements of holistic medicine for some time, I hope you will find this review interesting and informative. Society today is really no different today than it has ever been in regards to people seeking well being. In different part of the world different approaches to wellness have varied over the years and from culture to culture, but maybe not as much as we might think. So let's take a look at 4 important elements of holistic medicine.

The four elements of holistic medicine are grouped under; Homeopathic, Herbal, Tissue salts, and Flower Essences. At one time or another you will have encountered these elements even if you were not aware of them such. If you research you may find as I did that modern medicine often uses the 4 elements of holistic medicine in the manufacture of biochemical products. You certainly will have seen them used in cosmetics and beauty treatments the world over.

Homeopathic Remedies by definition of purpose are said to treat the symptoms of a condition and stimulate the body to begin a natural healing process. It is easier to understand homeopathic remedies if we are aware of the 4 fundamental principles involved in this form of treatment;

Principle 1. Law of similars' or like cures like: 1796 That is the understanding that disease can be cured by a medicinal substance given in micro doses that produces symptoms similar to the actual disease. It was first stated by German physician Samuel Hahnemann in 1796. Wikipedia states the "law of similar" is taken on the word of Samuel Hahnemann and is considered an unproven assertion since it is not a true law of nature based on the scientific method.

Principle 2. Law of minimum dose:1801 Only that amount of medicine is administered which is sufficient to cure the disease not more than that, that means no overdosing, thus avoiding unwanted side effects.

Principle 3. Single remedy:1810 Individualization may require different medicine for different people even though they may be suffering the same disease. One remedy at a time is based on total symptoms including physical, mental and emotional aspects.

Principle 4. Hering law of direction of cure:1845 Cure progresses from above downwards, from within outwards, from most important organ to less important one, proceeding in reverse order of the original symptoms occurring.

In homeopathic treatment as in traditional medicine it is understood that it may take a combination of treatments methods to obtain a full solution to wellness. Before proceeding with treatments of any kind I really recommend you do your research. Your heath is your business; know what you need to know before buying herbs.

Creditable companies that use sound practices in the manufacture of homeopathic products are available. Products can be manufactured in FDA and GMP registered pharmaceutical facilities under the supervision of qualified homeopaths and responsible pharmacists. Individual ingredients are often listed in the Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia of the United States (HPUS).

Like conventional medicine, homeopathy uses a wide variety of ingredients of herbal, mineral, or animal origin. As is the case with conventional medicine, some ingredients may be toxic in large amounts. However, when unique and specialized manufacturing methods are used in homeopathy; no molecular traces of the original raw ingredients are left in the final product.

Until next time, keep well!


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