Very interesting timing with your post, Gary. I recently began using my mind and intention to finish healing an injury I sustained falling on my left side onto the ground (grass).
The healing notion came from someone who said that the fall energetically hyperextended my pelvis to the right side of my body. I focused on bringing that energy back into place. Ever since then, I have had few issues with pain/discomfort. When I do, I use the same procedure to literally move the energy back into place.
It has had profound results.
We have, over many generations, been deceived by evildoers into minimizing our Creator-given powers, which begin in the mind. Take back our power, let the healing begin.
Yeah, it's pretty amazing how much the brain can influence the body, which influences the brain in a feedback loop.
I wouldn't be surprised if psychedelics combined with exercise could accelerate the rewiring. I heard that athletes that trained while under low doses had quicker gains.
If the brain works with the body, the body works with the brain.
Feldenkrais and Qigong helped me re-learn certain movements and finally heal long term injuries!
While it seems a tangent, I'd honestly like to hear more honest discussion of the process of healing when there is past abuse of some sort from someone in the healing position.
I mention this because these are usually the people that are labeled the most "resistant" to healing. It could be in the form of medical gaslighting or direct iatrogenic harm, or it could be in the form of abuse of power such as is often the case in psychiatric inpatient care.
It's well known that when the person who is supposed to help causes more harm, this creates a double bind and often a freeze or dissociative response. The high internal stress of this situation is often a primary factor in long term chronic conditions. Simply telling someone to get help without acknowledging that help is associated with harm can itself create more harm, because the implication is that someone should not be feeling what they're feeling.
I myself moderate a forum for survivors of therapeutic abuse and I'll have to say the stories I've heard are atrocious. Abuse of power is not uncommon. A friend of mine on the certification board of my state says that according to her estimates, at least 50% of people graduating from a counseling program should never be therapists due to personality disorders. But there is simply no filter. It's a little different for the medical profession, but abuse of power is rarely talked about.
Autonomy and trust in ones support is such an integral factor in health. I can't help but hypothesize that the betrayal of trust of the administrative class in health departments has a significant effect of the health of the nation even without direct iatrogenic harm.
That said, I very much appreciate your effort and open mindedness in the topic. It's just that Ted talks mainly focus on the inspirational factors, leaving some real practicalities behind.
You raise very important points. Even something like the negative "nocebo" effects of the way doctors currently deliver diagnosis can be traumatic and leave people with increased or more symptoms. In the UK at the moment, just about everyone I speak to who encounters physical or mental "healthcare" system is having "body memories" installed of stressful or traumatic interactions. What I saw and experienced when hospitalized a few years ago was horrifying. Maybe an additional positive of the having 3 different specialists in the room at the same time that the above neurologist suggests may also have somewhat of ameliorating effect on this, as its no so "behind closed doors" or, and god complexes, and power abuses are reigned in?
Very interesting timing with your post, Gary. I recently began using my mind and intention to finish healing an injury I sustained falling on my left side onto the ground (grass).
The healing notion came from someone who said that the fall energetically hyperextended my pelvis to the right side of my body. I focused on bringing that energy back into place. Ever since then, I have had few issues with pain/discomfort. When I do, I use the same procedure to literally move the energy back into place.
It has had profound results.
We have, over many generations, been deceived by evildoers into minimizing our Creator-given powers, which begin in the mind. Take back our power, let the healing begin.
Yeah, it's pretty amazing how much the brain can influence the body, which influences the brain in a feedback loop.
I wouldn't be surprised if psychedelics combined with exercise could accelerate the rewiring. I heard that athletes that trained while under low doses had quicker gains.
If the brain works with the body, the body works with the brain.
Feldenkrais and Qigong helped me re-learn certain movements and finally heal long term injuries!
https://youtube.com/@holdenqigong https://www.youtube.com/@taroiwamoto
While it seems a tangent, I'd honestly like to hear more honest discussion of the process of healing when there is past abuse of some sort from someone in the healing position.
I mention this because these are usually the people that are labeled the most "resistant" to healing. It could be in the form of medical gaslighting or direct iatrogenic harm, or it could be in the form of abuse of power such as is often the case in psychiatric inpatient care.
It's well known that when the person who is supposed to help causes more harm, this creates a double bind and often a freeze or dissociative response. The high internal stress of this situation is often a primary factor in long term chronic conditions. Simply telling someone to get help without acknowledging that help is associated with harm can itself create more harm, because the implication is that someone should not be feeling what they're feeling.
I myself moderate a forum for survivors of therapeutic abuse and I'll have to say the stories I've heard are atrocious. Abuse of power is not uncommon. A friend of mine on the certification board of my state says that according to her estimates, at least 50% of people graduating from a counseling program should never be therapists due to personality disorders. But there is simply no filter. It's a little different for the medical profession, but abuse of power is rarely talked about.
Autonomy and trust in ones support is such an integral factor in health. I can't help but hypothesize that the betrayal of trust of the administrative class in health departments has a significant effect of the health of the nation even without direct iatrogenic harm.
That said, I very much appreciate your effort and open mindedness in the topic. It's just that Ted talks mainly focus on the inspirational factors, leaving some real practicalities behind.
You raise very important points. Even something like the negative "nocebo" effects of the way doctors currently deliver diagnosis can be traumatic and leave people with increased or more symptoms. In the UK at the moment, just about everyone I speak to who encounters physical or mental "healthcare" system is having "body memories" installed of stressful or traumatic interactions. What I saw and experienced when hospitalized a few years ago was horrifying. Maybe an additional positive of the having 3 different specialists in the room at the same time that the above neurologist suggests may also have somewhat of ameliorating effect on this, as its no so "behind closed doors" or, and god complexes, and power abuses are reigned in?
Wonderful!
Brandy Gilmore- Ted talk.
Her healing journey and zzThe Placebo Effect.
https://youtu.be/5dEbqRYqY_0?si=nQWMRpuHqzWi2Hbd