Sometimes when you run a half marathon and your quads are shredded afterward, you feel good about it. And sometimes you don't.
If you've prepared well, i.e. worked hard to listen to your body, pushed just enough, recovered productively, and laid out a mental plan, you've had a race of which to be proud. In this case you relish having to hold on to the sink while lowering your tender glutes to the toilet.
Flip that coin over (your race did NOT leave you in a good mental or emotional place for various reasons), and you are cursing at the effort getting out of your car and crying at the sight of your foam roller. You feel like shit and are annoyed with yourself, your exploded muscles, and gravity in general.
The mindset you take in your recovery is the lace that ties your good and bad racing experiences together; the way to approach healing your body is the same whether you've achieved a personal best time or walked through a windstorm when you'd intended to fly to the finish line.
Begin by honoring your body's need to heal and the time it requires to do so. This includes letting your current level of fitness be and minding what hurts, when it pains you, and for how long. Then you can determine when and how to be active: maybe yoga, maybe a run, perhaps a nap. To rebuild your workout schedule too quickly will only extend the healing time; train when your body feels good again, not just good enough. You wouldn't accept an effort that's "good enough" in a race - don't allow that standard to govern your recovery, either. If you don't have faith that you will heal, how can you ask your body to break down and rebuild as you gain fitness?
We are always in a state of healing, be it potential or active. The human body continuously allows cells to die regenerates them, thus giving us the potential to recover from whatever might befall us. In this state of potential healing, we can improve fitness, but only to the point which we believe (consciously and subconsciously) that we can rebuild our tissue and recover from training. When we race or overdo it in a workout or a training program, we come into a state of active healing in which we can, at best, retain our current level of fitness, and at worst have to avoid our sport or activity of choice altogether.
Take each workout as a real-time fitness yardstick: What can I do today for my body? Will my workout help me to heal or to improve my fitness? Be mindful of whether your body desires a push to reap athletic benefits or simply to focus on regeneration to prepare for future workouts (which may in crude more healing and repairing until you are fully recovered). Then, tear up the roads and the quads knowing you can trust yourself to bounce back.
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Showing posts with label Alternative medicine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alternative medicine. Show all posts
Sunday, November 22, 2015
Wednesday, October 14, 2015
Pain and Energy Healing Interactive Workshop
Join me at CrossFit Nickel City (Virginia and Tenth Streets, Buffalo) for an interactive discussion on the messages our bodies send us in the form of pain. We will explore sources of pain, check out our own energy fields, and peek at the spiral path of healing. We will get to know our bodies, minds, and pain better so that we can interpret injury and affliction with the aim of using what we learn to eliminate pain, improve athletic performance, and prevent future discomfort.
12:00-1:00 Free and Open to the Public
RSVP - wellvibrations@gmail.com
12:00-1:00 Free and Open to the Public
RSVP - wellvibrations@gmail.com
Friday, July 11, 2014
Energetic Eating
Do some foods make you feel good by just being there, all senses aside; are you comforted by their very presence? I felt wholly satisfied yesterday as I sat in one of my favorite places, Five Points Bakery and Toast Cafe here in Buffalo, drinking coffee while a frozen loaf of sharp cheddar cheese bread sat wrapped in plastic on the table. I had bought the loaf to bring to a picnic, and I am not certain I'll even have a piece, but it completed my morning to have made the purchase and sip coffee with my pre-sliced companion. There is something emotionally fulfilling to me about baked goods; oftentimes I feel better having seen and smelled an item than I would have after having eaten it. In simple terms, Cheese Bread = Emotional Boost for me. At times, this kind of emotional lift can benefit our metabolisms as a whole. We hear and read that eating for emotional reasons can cause serious weight and health issues, and I agree that it can. I can't depend on a loaf of bread nourish all of my emotional needs. If I did, I'd feel like crap physically and psychologically, as well as accumulate extra weight.
So how do we feed our emotional metabolisms so that we feel and look good without tipping the scales toward food dependency or even addiction?
We can begin to tune in to our dietary needs (which change from day to day) by first paying attention to a single food item. Simply sit quietly for a moment (or do this at the end of a non-meditation) and bring your awareness to your chest or heart center. Think of a food item that you can't stand or that you've been eating way too much of lately while maintaining attention in your heart area. You'll notice a hollowed-out sensation in your chest and maybe a bit of a pushing backward. Release the thought and then concentrate on something you know is good for you or that you would really enjoy right in this moment. You'll feel a fullness in your chest and perhaps a pulling forward.
As you continue to practice this exercise with a variety of foods (and at different times but with the same food), you'll observe various degrees of attraction toward or repulsion from them. Allow this practice to guide your awareness of what you're eating, when, and why, and note how your culinary decisions are made and how they change.
Energetic Eating, as I'm calling it, is asking your mind, body, and energetic field what they holistically need in that moment. A "Yes, m'am!" answer is expressed by your being pulled forward, or toward the energetic signature of that item, while a "No way, man!" is shown be a repulsion from that food's energy.
You might learn that you don't need grains as often as you'd thought, or, if you're exercising heavily, that you need more protein than predicted. If you're a strict dieter, a cupcake could be a perfect ten for you when you least expect it. After a couple of weeks, gauge how you're feeling (the number on your scale is irrelevant, especially if you've upped your protein and built muscle) and see if you can intuit your food desires even more precisely and quickly.
Note: If you have been told that you have any food allergy or intolerance, consult your doctor before consuming anything that has been contraindicated in the past or that your physician has advised you to avoid. I am not a doctor, and this post is not medical advice.
So how do we feed our emotional metabolisms so that we feel and look good without tipping the scales toward food dependency or even addiction?
We can begin to tune in to our dietary needs (which change from day to day) by first paying attention to a single food item. Simply sit quietly for a moment (or do this at the end of a non-meditation) and bring your awareness to your chest or heart center. Think of a food item that you can't stand or that you've been eating way too much of lately while maintaining attention in your heart area. You'll notice a hollowed-out sensation in your chest and maybe a bit of a pushing backward. Release the thought and then concentrate on something you know is good for you or that you would really enjoy right in this moment. You'll feel a fullness in your chest and perhaps a pulling forward.
As you continue to practice this exercise with a variety of foods (and at different times but with the same food), you'll observe various degrees of attraction toward or repulsion from them. Allow this practice to guide your awareness of what you're eating, when, and why, and note how your culinary decisions are made and how they change.
Energetic Eating, as I'm calling it, is asking your mind, body, and energetic field what they holistically need in that moment. A "Yes, m'am!" answer is expressed by your being pulled forward, or toward the energetic signature of that item, while a "No way, man!" is shown be a repulsion from that food's energy.
You might learn that you don't need grains as often as you'd thought, or, if you're exercising heavily, that you need more protein than predicted. If you're a strict dieter, a cupcake could be a perfect ten for you when you least expect it. After a couple of weeks, gauge how you're feeling (the number on your scale is irrelevant, especially if you've upped your protein and built muscle) and see if you can intuit your food desires even more precisely and quickly.
Note: If you have been told that you have any food allergy or intolerance, consult your doctor before consuming anything that has been contraindicated in the past or that your physician has advised you to avoid. I am not a doctor, and this post is not medical advice.
Monday, June 30, 2014
Just Relax, Man
Summer is short here in the Northeast. It seems every year I have all weekends from June through August booked well before we even hit the solstice. This means that summer can be relaxing, but it can also be rushed and overwhelming. On a really hot and sticky day (like today in Buffalo), just to eat your vegetables can be daunting (oh, the chopping, slicing, and chewing!).
If you are lucky enough to have air conditioning or not, being alone can not only make you feel cooler, but also calm the fires of the mind during a hectic work (or play) day. We always talk and hear about the "little voice" inside our heads, but our heads (more specifically, our brains) can talk us into anything, whether is it positive or negative for us. Our bodies, on the other hand, use their voice to warn us. They speak to us every day through aches and pains, rashes, and even broken bones. Our bodies are the physical messengers for what is going on emotionally, energetically, and psychologically. In solitude, a "non-meditation" such as the following will center you and bring awareness to possible causes of any negative feelings.
Quick, Calming Non-Meditation (Nonitation?)
Sit for ten minutes and do absolutely nothing. Look at your phone or watch periodically if you need to mark the minutes, but just hang out with yourself, in your body. Sit inside your body, as opposed to in your head, that customized PC that keeps going and going.
Notice any part of you that feels off, different, sore, or is in some way asking for attention. Try and make connections between it and other body parts, emotions, or behaviors. If you want to keep going beyond ten minutes, be my guest.
Do this for a few days to discover which sensations recur, then use your brain to think about possible origins of the most bothersome.
Anything your discover can be useful in your healing and will definitely be positive for taking charge of how you feel.
If you are lucky enough to have air conditioning or not, being alone can not only make you feel cooler, but also calm the fires of the mind during a hectic work (or play) day. We always talk and hear about the "little voice" inside our heads, but our heads (more specifically, our brains) can talk us into anything, whether is it positive or negative for us. Our bodies, on the other hand, use their voice to warn us. They speak to us every day through aches and pains, rashes, and even broken bones. Our bodies are the physical messengers for what is going on emotionally, energetically, and psychologically. In solitude, a "non-meditation" such as the following will center you and bring awareness to possible causes of any negative feelings.
Quick, Calming Non-Meditation (Nonitation?)
Sit for ten minutes and do absolutely nothing. Look at your phone or watch periodically if you need to mark the minutes, but just hang out with yourself, in your body. Sit inside your body, as opposed to in your head, that customized PC that keeps going and going.
Notice any part of you that feels off, different, sore, or is in some way asking for attention. Try and make connections between it and other body parts, emotions, or behaviors. If you want to keep going beyond ten minutes, be my guest.
Do this for a few days to discover which sensations recur, then use your brain to think about possible origins of the most bothersome.
Anything your discover can be useful in your healing and will definitely be positive for taking charge of how you feel.
Monday, June 23, 2014
One Leap at a Time
For a really, really long time, I was a huge fan of doing the very least amount of work to yield a result. It was like my life was a microwave and as long as I pressed the Easy Pop button, something fragrant, buttery, and vaguely satisfying came out of it. And like when eating microwave popcorn, I was always left wanting more - never satisfied with life or the too easily obtained fruits of my efforts. I tried an antidepressant to lift me out of my blues, and after a couple years of that not doing it for me (the operative word being for), I ventured into alternative wellness in search of a "cure" for life's challenges.
When I first began my personal wellness journey, I spent a couple thousand dollars on classical homeopathy over the course of five years. In that time, I learned that the body is capable of healing itself (I was able to stop taking antidepressants), but I still had anxiety, fatigue, and a generally negative outlook on life. I felt like a huge piece of my life puzzle was still missing, and when I was introduced to Total Body Analysis and Energy Healing, I knew that becoming a practitioner would help to fit the components of my life together.
All of my choices and experiences have led me to where I am now, and they've helped me realize deeper issues and identify how they were influencing my life. However, if I could have had a guide to owning my health, I would have snatched it up and followed it step by step because I knew I wanted to heal mind, body and "spirit," I just didn't know how to navigate that path. I have always been food-centric, so to know that my approach to what I put into my body can positively influence my entire life is hugely empowering. Food is the common denominator for living things, and it's a great place to start a guide on owning our health and our healing. Today's post begins a series of steps toward building a commitment to holistic health, and you are ready to leap forward!
Giant Leap #1: Leverage Your Veg
Since we all have to eat, and all food contains energy (not just calories, but frequencies that can be highly positive or negative for our bodies), put only what you know is good for you into your gas tank.
How do we know what the best foods are for our individual bodies and metabolisms? Without a TBA consult, most people have trouble pinpointing exactly what will be most beneficial (or harmful) as far as diet, but two things we know for sure are that (most) fruits and vegetables are good and pesticides are BAD.
So for this first month of summer, your mission is not only to eat as many fresh (or freshly juiced) vegetables as possible, but also to select only organic incarnations of the produce on the following list from www.ewg.org. You can buy all other produce conventionally grown.
The Dirty Dozen Plus
Apples
Celery
Cherry Tomatoes
Cucumbers
Grapes
Nectarines (Imported)
Peaches
Potatoes
Snap Peas (Imported)
Spinach
Strawberries
Sweet Bell Peppers
Plus:
Hot peppers
Kale and collard greens
Time investment: Minimal (assuming you go grocery shopping anyway) - just wash and chop, add some organic, first cold pressed extra virgin olive oil and you're all set.
Monetary investment: $5-$10 increase per week (per person).
Hold the phone, Hann!!! You expect me to spend FORTY dollars more a MONTH on groceries? Next you'll be telling me to give up Netflix to cover it.
Please, don't cancel Netflix! What grocery items are you regularly buying that aren't clean fuel for your engine? Orange juice or any other pasteurized juice is a great junk-food-in-disguise to omit from your shopping budget. Try suspending the purchase of just one of those items if you're looking to save some dough.
Where will you be one month from now if you haven't tried this? By avoiding the toxins stored in conventional versions of the above produce, you can actually allow your body to start getting rid of any from past consumption on its own. Who knows what benefits you'll already start to feel when neurotoxic pesticides are no longer splashing around in your bloodstream?
Where will you be one year from now if you don't make the leap? You will continue to fight a battle with the negative energy of chemicals having full run of your body (on top of anything else that might be overtly bothering you). You might have $500 more in your checking account. Or you might not.
What will you have accomplished by buying and eating only produce that will give you nutrients and not pesticides? A sense of completing a small challenge. You'll feel those good neurochemicals that bust out when you've taken on something positive. Most importantly, you'll have a strengthened commitment to your health, and you'll be ready to take our next action leap.
If you already abide by the Dirty Dozen list, incorporate a fruit into one meal a day and different vegetables raw into the other two. You'll get a wide variety of nutritional benefits by doing this every day!
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Writing Process Blog Tour Post!
This post is part of #mywritingprocessblogtour. Thank you to Jennifer Winarski for linking me through her creative and inspiring blog: mindfulcanvas.blogspot.com.
What am I working on now?
A weekly post to take action toward holistic health. It might be creating and using an affirmation, listening to an injured body part, or baking your own sprouted-grain muffins.
How does my work differ from others in my genre?
I offer guidance and suggestions for nurturing our bodies and minds through holistic approach; I don't decry that everything I say should hold true for all readers, and I want my audience to be inspired and empowered to make healthy choices that will work for them, in their unique life situations.
Why do I write what I do?
I often write about food because it is the most concrete, recognizable energetic medium for us humans. We all eat, we can all choose what we eat, and food alters our energy just as much as our thoughts and our environment do. Also, I love to eat and to cook and bake for myself and the people I love.
How does my writing process work?
To write I need an idea that really grabs me; then it is a pleasure to attempt to verbalize my thoughts and feelings. I believe that with the momentum of a weekly action post, I will be inspired by your needs and experiences to drive each next step.
Edit
Now I am passing the torch to another talented blogger:
Karin De La Rosa is an accountant by trade and a farmer by choice. She sources the majority of her family’s larder locally, supplementing what she is able to produce on her family’s acre through direct sales from other local farmers. With an eye toward economy (preserving $10/bushels of colored peppers in season for example), Karin believes what we put into our body has a direct impact on our health and mental well being. Karin shares her farming and culinary escapades at PatchesAcre.com.
What am I working on now?
A weekly post to take action toward holistic health. It might be creating and using an affirmation, listening to an injured body part, or baking your own sprouted-grain muffins.
How does my work differ from others in my genre?
I offer guidance and suggestions for nurturing our bodies and minds through holistic approach; I don't decry that everything I say should hold true for all readers, and I want my audience to be inspired and empowered to make healthy choices that will work for them, in their unique life situations.
Why do I write what I do?
I often write about food because it is the most concrete, recognizable energetic medium for us humans. We all eat, we can all choose what we eat, and food alters our energy just as much as our thoughts and our environment do. Also, I love to eat and to cook and bake for myself and the people I love.
How does my writing process work?
To write I need an idea that really grabs me; then it is a pleasure to attempt to verbalize my thoughts and feelings. I believe that with the momentum of a weekly action post, I will be inspired by your needs and experiences to drive each next step.
Edit
Now I am passing the torch to another talented blogger:
Karin De La Rosa is an accountant by trade and a farmer by choice. She sources the majority of her family’s larder locally, supplementing what she is able to produce on her family’s acre through direct sales from other local farmers. With an eye toward economy (preserving $10/bushels of colored peppers in season for example), Karin believes what we put into our body has a direct impact on our health and mental well being. Karin shares her farming and culinary escapades at PatchesAcre.com.
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Food? Food!
I love food: Talking about recipes, dreaming up party menus, prepping
the night before for warm biscuits after a morning run. One thing I
can't stand is feeling limited in what I can eat. I research nutrition
and the various dietary and culinary approaches to healthy eating, and I
have found a balance that fits my family, our needs, and our busy
schedule. We eat all kinds of foods, and I make every effort to ensure
that the ingredients are high quality and nutrient dense.
However,
eating a variety of foods (meats, grains, dairy, sweets) sometimes
equates to
overeating certain items for me. I love to go out for coffee in the
morning, and we hit a café for breakfast as a family every Saturday. It
is during those times that I am reminded of how delicious a well-made
white flour and sugar scone can taste with dark roast coffee, or the
savory satisfaction of a buttered artisanal English muffin. Those
pleasures can often lead to allowing a slice or two of take out pizza
for dinner, a weekday coffee shop rendezvous with a toasted pumpkin
muffin, and a veritable snowball effect of processed wheat occurring in
my gut. Then I feel tired, bloated, sore, and generally unhappy while I
stick to quinoa, beans, and nuts trying to rid myself of the junk my
body is working overtime to digest and eliminate. I don't have an intolerance to wheat, but too much of anything will eventually put a
smackdown on your physical operating system. However, I do love the W.
Somerset Maugham quote:
Excess on occasion is exhilarating. It prevents moderation from acquiring the deadening effect of a habit
- a perfect reason to overindulge.
On
Saturday I diverged from the familial café breakfast and had a lovely
brunch with my running gals. We all brought a dish and gathered at the
warm and welcoming home of our self-appointed social organizer (thanks,
Amy!). That the company was fabulous was a given, and the food
covered all bases: Savory, fruity, sweet, and hearty. For us, eating
food leads to talking about food, and that morning our culinary chatter
was linked to healing. We spoke about eliminating digestive issues with
TBA remedies and the occasional need to avoid (not eat) a food for a
short time while on a remedy to allow the body to heal. Food itself is
not the source of a digestive problem, but rather a trigger of
symptoms. So, until the body is ready to detoxify the cause of the
issue, it is sometimes necessary to stay away from the aggravating
food. This is different from an elimination diet because in TBA we know
(through advanced
kineseology) which food(s) is not jiving with our frequencies, and
to allow the remedy to do its job of supporting and detoxifying the
body, we avoid the problem food so as not to disrupt the healing harmony
occurring between the body's frequencies and those of the remedy.
Digestive problems are not the only symptoms that can be set off by
foods. Asthma, fatigue, muscle and joint pain, inflammation, sinus
conditions, and multiple other complaints can mitigated or eliminated by
a TBA remedy and avoiding aggravating items or food groups until the
body is through uncovering and detoxifying the cause of the problem.
One friend was so happy to know that although her gas problems ceased
while avoiding wheat when taking her remedy, she'll be able to enjoy the
ubiquitous grain again soon with no issues.
We
live in a world full of drive-thru lattes, "healthy" cereal bars, and
other convenience items that, once in a while, can save the day for even
the most well-intended and informed eater. Should we limit our
consumption of these "day-savers"? Absolutely (I'll give you a list of
awesome versus acceptable options for your pantry soon), but we don't
need to live in the restrictive and isolating realm of food allergies
and intolerances when we have TBA to figure out what's behind it all.
Click here for details on TBA sessions and a free consultation.
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Friday, January 31, 2014
Whaddya Expect?
I'm
good at a few things: Baking scones, taking tests, packing for
trips. I find success in those activities without much effort, and I
have come to expect good results with each attempt. Running, however,
does not have an "easy" button for me. I am decent at it, but I have to
work really, really hard not to suck. If nothing else, for my training
efforts this winter I'm going to have the strongest ankle muscles in
running history (doesn't that just scream sexy?).
When I was running
Wednesday evening, my lower legs (for what felt like the 100th time)
were straining to trod over the still uneven street and sidewalk
surfaces that through the preceding weeks had been doused in snow and
scraped, shoveled, semi-salted, and otherwise razed to create
a potentially dangerous sort of race track. In instances of physical
challenge such as this, my inclination had usually been to fixate on the
pain, worry about possible injury, and complain and fret until my next
run when the pain would return, migrate, or lay dormant, waiting to
strike (ahem, give me an excuse to bonk) during a race. All this led to
constant worry about any activity becoming the culprit of my next
injury. I had not only accepted running in pain (something always hurt
when I exercised), but I came to expect it. I had actually, without
consciously trying, lowered my expectations to meet my injuries. I had
let the injuries become part of who I was, and they shaped my running
identity. I felt like I just wasn't put together for running, like I
was a runner in a non-runner's body. But I kept running.
Back to Wednesday night:
The muscles around and above my ankles were burning with the effort of
propelling my lower body over footprints, ice chunks, and garbage, but
when my brain started down its old path of "this is bad"-ness, I got
indignant and stopped in my tracks. It was there, on Niagara Street,
that I decided enough was enough: I gave my bossy brain an energetic
bitch-slap. This winter running was going to STRENGTHEN my legs,
CONDITION my heart and lungs and PROPEL my fitness to a new level. No
more hurting, no more fretting, and no more feeling sorry for myself,
like a misfit toy, over how I was put together (and of course, I
couldn't help but clear my chakras, too).
I had kept running through
the pain because of what running could give me - stress release,
calorie burning, a feeling of accomplishment, but I wasn't giving to the
running. I'm not talking training intensity or fidelity, I mean
attitude and appreciation. I needed to expect more from myself, rather
than relying on running to provide me with an escape and a size 2 butt.
To put a spin on JFK's words: Ask not what your running (or
teaching/parenting/basket weaving) can do for you, really examine what
you can do to improve your efforts holistically. We can raise our own vibrational
frequencies to meet our high expectations, and then we will feel more
accomplished and be prone to continuing the cycle. For me it was like
stepping out of a snow bank and onto a sunny boardwalk. And, it
inspired me to write this post. Expect more like this one out of me - I
do.
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Well Vibe, in a Nutshell
For those of you who appreciate brevity, here is what Well Vibrations offers in a nutshell. I will paste segments of this post into my info pages as well.
Total Body Analysis (TBA)
focuses on supporting our anatomy and physiology while detoxifying
Disease Causing Agents such as chemicals, heavy metals, bacteria,
emotional stress, food allergies, and genetic mutations. The remedies
initiate and facilitate physical, psychological, and emotional healing.
Energy Coaching sessions
aim to bring our energetic vibrational frequencies to their highest
(healthiest) point through eliminating limiting subconscious beliefs
trapped in our chakras (energy centers). My technique is based on Dr.
David R. Hawkins' research in his book
Power Vs. Force. Click here for a cool chart:
http://www.dharanipitaka.net/2011/2008/teachings/DavidHawkins-PowerVsForce.pdf
This is not a talk therapy session and the client does not need to
divulge personal information or share painful emotional memories.
Energy Coaching facilitates setting achievable goals (in running and in
life) and taking steps toward realizing our greatest potential. In
addition, we can support injured tissue to allow healing while
continuing to run happily!
These two approaches work
harmoniously and together provide the most complete (and speedy) path to
eliminating the issues that hold us back as athletes, professionals,
partners, and parents.
Labels:
Alternative medicine,
emotion,
emotional healing,
energy blocks,
energy clearing,
energy healing,
Energy Medicine,
Healing,
Homeopathy,
overview,
remedies,
TBA,
Total Body Analysis,
wellness
Thursday, January 16, 2014
Why Can't I?
Can't is a strong and
overused word. I've said and thought it a trillion times, but in only a
handful of those instances has it been true: I can't make it at 3:30
on Wednesday because I have to work, yes. I can't start my own business
because I don't have the time, clearly no.
When I was wrestling with
the notion of running my sixth marathon this spring, knowing the time
and energy commitment, and my husband said, "Maybe you should wait and
train over summer vacation. You like to do a lot of other things on top
of teaching and running," I snapped back: "You like to do a lot,
too!" (he is training for his eleventh marathon, swimming, teaching, and
fathering). His response resonated like a Medieval church bell: "I
can handle training and teaching; when I get tired, I don't get mad or
take it out on other people."
True, I haven't trained for a marathon
during the school year since 2002, before children, and have avoided it
since - until that conversation. "Well why can't
I, then?" was my retort, more a statement than a question in that
moment. Ever the husband, Mike either evaded or was alluded by the
rhetorical nature of my reply and shot back: "Yes, why CAN'T you?
You're the one making the remedies, doing all the energy healing
stuff." It was his emphasis on
can't that struck me.
I
had been so focused on helping others to heal and release their energy
blockages that I had overlooked practicing what I preach: Pick a
goal, right your chakras, dissolve your negative beliefs,
detox your bod, and just DO it (Nike pun intended). I had also, as usual, targeted problems preventing me from doing and having it all: What if I get too tired? What if my kids are cranky and I have to get them dinner before an evening run? What if my butt gets vacuumed to the toilet seat at 5 am and I miss my 400 meter interval session? I was living excuses in my mind instead of finding solutions. I began to use my own protocol for clearing negative beliefs and chakral densities until I could clearly see what I needed to and COULD do: Not only run the Buffalo Marathon on May 25 (along with Mike,
although he will be running much more swiftly), but also start a blog about
my busy spring adventure while declaring that I am trying to qualify for
the Boston Marathon. To put it all out there is very motivating
(and a bit stressful), but I am
excited to bring you
www.runvibrations.blogspot.com. Best of all I can handle it, knowing that the doubts and excuses that may arise are simply manifestations of dark energy and can be conquered through the energetic healing mechanisms of the universe. I have found the dragon slayer and uncovered the "can" in myself, and I bring it to the world for anyone who wants to shed the shroud of self doubt and step (or run) up to a better life.
Saturday, January 11, 2014
Mindfulness Is Only the Half of It
This post is a follow up to my previous installment entitled New Year, So What? In that post I discussed the value of choosing change and how Well Vibrations helps your body allow the transformation by identifying energy blockages and negative beliefs. Today I am writing to stress the importance of clearing the energy in which lay our negative subconscious beliefs in order to enable change in our attitudes, health, and overall abilities to act positively. Only then can we experience the follow through of positive change: Our true selves reaching toward and achieving our goals and dreams.
I recently read Susan Albers' "Mindful Eating Pledge." It caught my attention because of my own desire to think more about what, when, why, and how I am eating to facilitate nutritional balance and overall digestion and assimilation.
Albers advises (source):
1. Eat mindfully: I will be more aware of each bite.
2. Pace, not race: I will eat slowly and with intention.
3. When I eat, just eat: I will eat without distraction.
4. Calm without calories: I will find true comfort and soothing without food.
5. Eat less, nourish more: I will eat foods that nurture my body.
These recommendations make perfect sense; they are practical and each is simple enough to parse out and attempt to master systematically rather than simultaneously. The only hitch is actually living them, day after day, bite after bite, and not worrying when we might give in to the next marshmallow craving or sweet potato chip binge. That worry and temptation don't come from mental weakness or a desire to be unhealthy. They stem from inner, unconscious beliefs that we have assimilated over time from our families and schools, the media, and our own choices. We don't and can't choose what negative energy our unconscious allows to form any belief, be it positive: "I am a fit and active individual" or negative: "I will never enjoy exercise or healthy foods."
Those of us who have difficulty taking this pledge and following through on it (or any other positive life change) need to rid ourselves of the energetic blocks that are the root cause of our, in this case, inability to separate food from emotion and eat for the purpose of nourishing our bodies.
At Well Vibrations, I have created a protocol for clearing negative beliefs in the order of which our bodies and minds are ready so that positive changes occur with almost no effort from the client and results appear in all aspects of life. Stop worrying and start achieving; it's all within you.
I recently read Susan Albers' "Mindful Eating Pledge." It caught my attention because of my own desire to think more about what, when, why, and how I am eating to facilitate nutritional balance and overall digestion and assimilation.
Albers advises (source):
1. Eat mindfully: I will be more aware of each bite.
2. Pace, not race: I will eat slowly and with intention.
3. When I eat, just eat: I will eat without distraction.
4. Calm without calories: I will find true comfort and soothing without food.
5. Eat less, nourish more: I will eat foods that nurture my body.
These recommendations make perfect sense; they are practical and each is simple enough to parse out and attempt to master systematically rather than simultaneously. The only hitch is actually living them, day after day, bite after bite, and not worrying when we might give in to the next marshmallow craving or sweet potato chip binge. That worry and temptation don't come from mental weakness or a desire to be unhealthy. They stem from inner, unconscious beliefs that we have assimilated over time from our families and schools, the media, and our own choices. We don't and can't choose what negative energy our unconscious allows to form any belief, be it positive: "I am a fit and active individual" or negative: "I will never enjoy exercise or healthy foods."
Those of us who have difficulty taking this pledge and following through on it (or any other positive life change) need to rid ourselves of the energetic blocks that are the root cause of our, in this case, inability to separate food from emotion and eat for the purpose of nourishing our bodies.
At Well Vibrations, I have created a protocol for clearing negative beliefs in the order of which our bodies and minds are ready so that positive changes occur with almost no effort from the client and results appear in all aspects of life. Stop worrying and start achieving; it's all within you.
Sunday, December 15, 2013
Who Are You?
There are sick people and well people and some in between. That's a fairly obvious categorization.
However, to be sick or well is not a real-time descriptor but rather state of being, a mindset. I am not saying that illness is all in one's head; I am not saying that an individual chooses to have leukemia, AIDS, or cystic fibrosis. I am stating that there are vastly different ways to approach and heal disease.
Have you ever known someone diagnosed with a serious or terminal illness who becomes a model for living? Someone who looks at disease as a life challenge and emerges as a happier, more whole being because of it? Is that "diseased" person sick or well? By my definition, he or she is a shining example of a well person. She might not have begun her journey through illness as a well person, but learned that extracting positive meaning from disease is a path to survival.
Conversely, maybe you always pass your yearly physical, have normal blood work, and take your vitamins, but are continually waiting for the next sinus infection, dreading a tickle in the throat, or constantly nursing an exercise-related injury (isn't that elliptical supposed to keep you healthy?). If you're worried about getting sick or give up and chug Nyquil when your nose runs, chances are you are more in the "sick person" category. Not because you like being sick, but because you haven't realized your body's healing potential - that it wants to be well and can do almost anything to get there. If you let it.
Some of us can be the terminally-diagnosed patient who learns, grows, and heals beautifully through her own doing, and some of us need a little help just getting out of bed each morning. That is why I have started this blog and a Total Body Analysis practice, to help your body allow itself to heal through providing the energetic frequencies it needs. Together, we can learn to be in tune with our bodies and allow ourselves to enter a state of wellbeing. Sometimes this involves just a remedy, in other cases we need to do more emotional energy therapy in order to release the negative frequencies which bind us to illness. But the potential is there for each and every one of us. Who do you want to be?
However, to be sick or well is not a real-time descriptor but rather state of being, a mindset. I am not saying that illness is all in one's head; I am not saying that an individual chooses to have leukemia, AIDS, or cystic fibrosis. I am stating that there are vastly different ways to approach and heal disease.
Have you ever known someone diagnosed with a serious or terminal illness who becomes a model for living? Someone who looks at disease as a life challenge and emerges as a happier, more whole being because of it? Is that "diseased" person sick or well? By my definition, he or she is a shining example of a well person. She might not have begun her journey through illness as a well person, but learned that extracting positive meaning from disease is a path to survival.
Conversely, maybe you always pass your yearly physical, have normal blood work, and take your vitamins, but are continually waiting for the next sinus infection, dreading a tickle in the throat, or constantly nursing an exercise-related injury (isn't that elliptical supposed to keep you healthy?). If you're worried about getting sick or give up and chug Nyquil when your nose runs, chances are you are more in the "sick person" category. Not because you like being sick, but because you haven't realized your body's healing potential - that it wants to be well and can do almost anything to get there. If you let it.
Some of us can be the terminally-diagnosed patient who learns, grows, and heals beautifully through her own doing, and some of us need a little help just getting out of bed each morning. That is why I have started this blog and a Total Body Analysis practice, to help your body allow itself to heal through providing the energetic frequencies it needs. Together, we can learn to be in tune with our bodies and allow ourselves to enter a state of wellbeing. Sometimes this involves just a remedy, in other cases we need to do more emotional energy therapy in order to release the negative frequencies which bind us to illness. But the potential is there for each and every one of us. Who do you want to be?
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Call if You're in Trouble
You're driving down the highway alone and skid off the road into a ditch. You make a quick assessment of the situation and find that you have all of your parts, and your car seems to as well. Heck, the engine is still on. Great. Step on the gas, and...nothing. You're stuck. Next steps: Turn on the heater and end it all in a cloud of carbon monoxide? Too dramatic. Call a friend to get you, and leave the car to report it stolen later? Too risky. Call a tow truck? Duh and bingo! You have roadside assistance, you are safe for the time being, and you'll be out and back on track within an hour. A simple, economical, straightforward solution to getting stuck.
What about when you're stuck in a health issue? If your chemotherapy or antidepressants or yoga just aren't doing the trick anymore? How can you get out of that physical or emotional ditch? End it all in your manner of choice? Please, no! Get referrals for a dozen specialists and spend time and co-pays trying to find the "real" problem? Who has time for that?
You are reading a blog about a safe, effective, and inexpensive holistic solution to being stuck in a health rut.
Total Body Analysis and the energy therapy that I practice as a complement will gently and safely help your shiny new Mercedes (that's you: your body, mind, and spirit) creep up and out of that muddy ditch in the middle of nowhere. And you don't need a membership or insurance - just a phone call and an open mind. If talk therapy is your bag, we can talk as long as you like. If privacy is something you hold dear, just think about your issues and your body will signal what it needs. It's like the mechanic hooking your car up to a computer at the shop (except we don't use wires and your energy field is way smarter than a computer).
Check out Well Vibrations TBA and energy therapy or research holistic medicine on your own. I guarantee it'll pick you up.
What about when you're stuck in a health issue? If your chemotherapy or antidepressants or yoga just aren't doing the trick anymore? How can you get out of that physical or emotional ditch? End it all in your manner of choice? Please, no! Get referrals for a dozen specialists and spend time and co-pays trying to find the "real" problem? Who has time for that?
You are reading a blog about a safe, effective, and inexpensive holistic solution to being stuck in a health rut.
Total Body Analysis and the energy therapy that I practice as a complement will gently and safely help your shiny new Mercedes (that's you: your body, mind, and spirit) creep up and out of that muddy ditch in the middle of nowhere. And you don't need a membership or insurance - just a phone call and an open mind. If talk therapy is your bag, we can talk as long as you like. If privacy is something you hold dear, just think about your issues and your body will signal what it needs. It's like the mechanic hooking your car up to a computer at the shop (except we don't use wires and your energy field is way smarter than a computer).
Check out Well Vibrations TBA and energy therapy or research holistic medicine on your own. I guarantee it'll pick you up.
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Decisions, Decisions
My husband is a great guy: Dedicated father, gifted teacher, hardworking house cleaner, and talented runner. Sounds ideal, but who cares if he's a runner, right? Running may not seem like a typical highlight on a husband's resume, but it is a huge part of who Mike is, and running his tenth marathon last weekend (and the week preceding it) illustrates perfectly the topic of this post: Total Body Analysis works wonders, but we have to do right by ourselves, too.
Put yourself in Mike's (running) shoes. You have trained well, your wife/TBA Practitioner has helped keep you in top form with remedies, good food, and love, and you are just itching to hear that starting gun blast and then take off for another Boston Marathon-qualifying race time.
Except.
Your second grade students have hacked and sneezed on you all week, your own children are involved in a hundred activities, you had to stay up for those football AND those baseball games, your wife stresses you out with her own regaling of school day challenges, and you really, really like the new drink you've discovered, the maple old fashioned, but unfortunaley bourbon is not exactly a tonic for the immune system. So, you develop a little cough, spend nine or ten hours in bed the Wednesday through Saturday before your marathon, load up on sprouted wheat pretzels, and hope for the best, really believing Sunday will be your day to shine for 26.2 miles.
The believing part is key; we have to believe we can succeed at something in order to bring it to fruition, but as we shall see here, belief and good holistic medicine can get you to the starting line, but to finish strong, you need to give yourself some TLC.
But aren't my primary and general remedies detoxing, antidoting, and supporting my system??? They sure are, but any toxic energy that is layered on after we make your remedy will be a factor in how you feel. So Mike's ever-present work stress got him down, and then staying up late and the occasional weeknight old fashioned knocked him out. His remedies helped keep him from officially getting sick, but he was not in tip-top health for peak performance in a marathon (he finished in 3:27 - still pretty danged good).
It all boils down to making decisions. We decide we want to be healthy, but wellness doesn't stop there. It's an ongoing, active state where we're constantly pitching, catching, swerving, and righting ourselves as the days roll on and life's challenges and rewards unfold. It is vital to have a supportive circle of friends and family to talk with about being and staying well and to continually think about the consequences of our daily habits. Then we can make solid decisions about how to tackle what's in front of us with the big picture in mind. You're reading this, so you have "meta-wellness," or thinking about being well. Decide to take the next step: Make a TBA appointment, down a kale smoothie, or just go to bed early, and rock on knowing you're ready for a strong tomorrow.
Put yourself in Mike's (running) shoes. You have trained well, your wife/TBA Practitioner has helped keep you in top form with remedies, good food, and love, and you are just itching to hear that starting gun blast and then take off for another Boston Marathon-qualifying race time.
Except.
Your second grade students have hacked and sneezed on you all week, your own children are involved in a hundred activities, you had to stay up for those football AND those baseball games, your wife stresses you out with her own regaling of school day challenges, and you really, really like the new drink you've discovered, the maple old fashioned, but unfortunaley bourbon is not exactly a tonic for the immune system. So, you develop a little cough, spend nine or ten hours in bed the Wednesday through Saturday before your marathon, load up on sprouted wheat pretzels, and hope for the best, really believing Sunday will be your day to shine for 26.2 miles.
The believing part is key; we have to believe we can succeed at something in order to bring it to fruition, but as we shall see here, belief and good holistic medicine can get you to the starting line, but to finish strong, you need to give yourself some TLC.
But aren't my primary and general remedies detoxing, antidoting, and supporting my system??? They sure are, but any toxic energy that is layered on after we make your remedy will be a factor in how you feel. So Mike's ever-present work stress got him down, and then staying up late and the occasional weeknight old fashioned knocked him out. His remedies helped keep him from officially getting sick, but he was not in tip-top health for peak performance in a marathon (he finished in 3:27 - still pretty danged good).
It all boils down to making decisions. We decide we want to be healthy, but wellness doesn't stop there. It's an ongoing, active state where we're constantly pitching, catching, swerving, and righting ourselves as the days roll on and life's challenges and rewards unfold. It is vital to have a supportive circle of friends and family to talk with about being and staying well and to continually think about the consequences of our daily habits. Then we can make solid decisions about how to tackle what's in front of us with the big picture in mind. You're reading this, so you have "meta-wellness," or thinking about being well. Decide to take the next step: Make a TBA appointment, down a kale smoothie, or just go to bed early, and rock on knowing you're ready for a strong tomorrow.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
What's Your Compass?
Wellness is a complex concept. We know when we have or don't have it, but its definition is more difficult to identify. Total Body Analysis (TBA) is an integral part of the journey to wellness: We pinpoint areas of weakness and support or detoxify them with a remedy. TBA allows toxic layers to be revealed and antidoted, and all we have to do is "take one half-dropperful of the remedy three times a day." But can a vial of energetic liquid be the answer? Is it enough to supply ourselves with a spectrum of frequencies and let them do the work? It can be, depending on how we address the question of why. Why do we want to be well? If we don't examine our motives for change and healing, we can't identify a goal. How will we know we've achieved wellness if we can't visualize its appearance or how we will have changed as a whole human being?
My picture of wellness is continuously transforming, and I am always striving to get to the next level of healing by discovering the why and then following the how. TBA is the tool that allows me to traverse the path to wellness, but my mind and my heart are the guides.
My picture of wellness is continuously transforming, and I am always striving to get to the next level of healing by discovering the why and then following the how. TBA is the tool that allows me to traverse the path to wellness, but my mind and my heart are the guides.
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Only If You're Bleeding
Call me an insensitive mother of small children, but I hate band-aids. Their physical annoyance of getting wet, coming unstuck, and leaving dirty black glue marks, bleeds, if you will, into their utilitarian menace as a placater for all things boo-boo to children. I feel like when I need a band-aid, it really can't hold up to the daily grind, and ninety-nine percent of the time that a kid gets to apply one, it's just to make her stop whining.
Metaphorical band-aids can quite literally squeeze my soul until a gaping, ironic wound erupts, oozing my sanity and clouding my judgement with worry over the next spirit-crushing quick fix that might adhere itself to my life.
On a daily basis for me, the most harmful band-aids come in the form of non-solutions to social justice issues in public education. I teach English as a Second Language full time in an elementary school and I see the ill-effects of data folders, pre- and post-tests, state assessments, and New! Research-Based! language arts programs on our children. School districts spend millions of dollars on these band-aids while neglecting the goal of a solid education: A happy, whole child.
What does this have to do with alternative healing, you might ask. The educational band-aid metaphor is akin to the conditioning we've undergone as a society to buy this, pop this, drive this, or wear this to make us feel - whole? Not really. Temporarily satiated? Maybe. The cyclical emptiness and emotional longing that ensue from conditioned consumerism leave us with a deep need to heal. On our healing paths we sometimes try band-aids in an earnest effort for wholeness. Years ago, my general practitioner, who was conditioned to prescribe antidepressants, wrote me a script for Zoloft to help my symptoms of depression. I was conditioned to believe that a pill would heal me. If that were the case I would not be writing this post. But that band-aid, like many, was a learning experience. We cannot change our past actions, but we can learn to change our attitudes and shift our focus away from consuming to feel better and toward autonomous healing. We are only human, and sometimes band-aids are necessary to get us through the day or to deal with an unexpected problem. Those patches (like the beer I had last night - hey, it helped calm my brain to start this post), as long as we recognize their role, are a way to keep us from straying from our healing paths
(sometimes, they plain keep us from going crazy).
Perhaps one day as well, school districts will recognize the difference between a quick fix and plotting a lifelong course, and they'll shift away from programming our children and toward allowing the learners to lead in their educational dance.
For now, readers, may we know when we are truly bleeding, and when to just give our four year old a box of cartoon bandages because he's wailing in a restaurant from bumping his head on our elbow (then maybe we can finish our wine).
Metaphorical band-aids can quite literally squeeze my soul until a gaping, ironic wound erupts, oozing my sanity and clouding my judgement with worry over the next spirit-crushing quick fix that might adhere itself to my life.
On a daily basis for me, the most harmful band-aids come in the form of non-solutions to social justice issues in public education. I teach English as a Second Language full time in an elementary school and I see the ill-effects of data folders, pre- and post-tests, state assessments, and New! Research-Based! language arts programs on our children. School districts spend millions of dollars on these band-aids while neglecting the goal of a solid education: A happy, whole child.
What does this have to do with alternative healing, you might ask. The educational band-aid metaphor is akin to the conditioning we've undergone as a society to buy this, pop this, drive this, or wear this to make us feel - whole? Not really. Temporarily satiated? Maybe. The cyclical emptiness and emotional longing that ensue from conditioned consumerism leave us with a deep need to heal. On our healing paths we sometimes try band-aids in an earnest effort for wholeness. Years ago, my general practitioner, who was conditioned to prescribe antidepressants, wrote me a script for Zoloft to help my symptoms of depression. I was conditioned to believe that a pill would heal me. If that were the case I would not be writing this post. But that band-aid, like many, was a learning experience. We cannot change our past actions, but we can learn to change our attitudes and shift our focus away from consuming to feel better and toward autonomous healing. We are only human, and sometimes band-aids are necessary to get us through the day or to deal with an unexpected problem. Those patches (like the beer I had last night - hey, it helped calm my brain to start this post), as long as we recognize their role, are a way to keep us from straying from our healing paths
(sometimes, they plain keep us from going crazy).
Perhaps one day as well, school districts will recognize the difference between a quick fix and plotting a lifelong course, and they'll shift away from programming our children and toward allowing the learners to lead in their educational dance.
For now, readers, may we know when we are truly bleeding, and when to just give our four year old a box of cartoon bandages because he's wailing in a restaurant from bumping his head on our elbow (then maybe we can finish our wine).
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