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Attitude For Healing

February 2, 2009 by Admin  
Filed under Healing Tips

breath-meditation

Coming soon - tips for the best attitude to take to promote your own healing, as written by an inspirational cancer survivor.

The Nocebo Effect

January 28, 2009 by Admin  
Filed under Featured, Healing Tips

the-nocebo-effect-bad-doctor

The Placebo Effect

We are all aware of the reality of the placebo effect. This is the very real affect that an dummy sugar pill can have in real healing for some patients, when told by their doctor that it will work. This effect is so accepted to modern medicine that all rigorous scientific studies must contain a control group on such dummy treatments, to guage whether a treatment is the cause of a result, or merely the perception of being cared for.

Whilst no-one argues the placebo effect is real, the implications of this have not yet been felt in most western doctor’s approaches to medicine. How often have you felt that your doctor emotionally believed in your ability to overcome any odds? It has been found that holding the hand of a patient under general anesthetic calms the body in times of stress and leads to better outcomes. When was the last time your doctor held your hand as they discussed your health?

The Nocebo Effect

What is perhaps even more disturbing than the lack of positive treatments not yet developed by western doctors, is the fact that just as the placebo affect occurs, so does its opposite - the ‘nocebo’ effect. In fact, this effect is widely acknowledged as fact in medicine. In the past, a surgeon may have expressed shock or said out loud how much worse the prognosis may seem to him or her during surgery - feeling safe in the fact that the patient was unconscious. In fact, it has been found that even unconscious patients are aware of every word said during surgery (just as they are aware that their hand is held). As a general rule, surgeons are told not to make any negative comments whilst performing their work.

Whether this has been successfully implemented in all hospitals is a moot point. One only has to remember one’s own experience when one is awake to see that there is still a long way to go. Just as a doctor can convince you that a dummy drug will work, they can also unknowingly convince you that a real drug will not work, if they do not like your statistical chances. A mere quivering in his voice, or lack of eye contact, may be enough to do the damage.

What to do?

If you have a doctor that you feel may be giving you a ‘nocebo’ effect, do not be afraid to change doctors. Such actions are now seen as not best practice, and other aspects of their treatment may be similarly out of date. Your doctor should be, in all cases, actively promoting and supporting your cure, not subconsciously leading you towards illness they are predicting.

Further Reading

Stay tuned for a future article that takes the implications of this reality a step further. If your doctor is able to convince you that you will not get well, could they also subconsciously convince you that you have a certain disease? While suffering from real symptoms that can lead to real and grave effects, could it be perhaps you are not ‘really’ ill, after all?

Have you had negative experiences with western doctors? How might have you been affected by a “nocebo” effect?

Health Feng Shui

January 28, 2009 by Admin  
Filed under Featured, Healing Tips

health-feng-shui

If you are a sceptic, recent convert, or just curious to try it out, Feng Shui is a unique way to approach a stubborn or unexpected health problem. It sits outside the conventional ways of treating disease in the west, but it is gaining many converts for its sometimes miraculous results.

It may be hard for a westerner to conceive of how moving a houseplant, or changing the positions of our beds, can affect something as ‘real’ as MS, diabetes, or other serious illnesses. One way to think of it is that we are intimately connected to our surroundings, indeed our bodies are exchanging molecules with chairs, trees, and television sets every second of our lives. Our home is also the most fundamental connection to the world around us - it is how we visualize ourselves and our place within it.

We are recent converts to the effect Feng Shui has on our health, after trying some basic cures. If you are interested in trying some basic techniques, why not try these steps:

Eastern Direction

  • The major ‘direction’ fore health in Feng Shui is the east. If you were to draw a ‘noughts and crosses’ board, of nine squares (3 x 3) over your house plan - north at the top - the middle right hand side section would represent your eastern health ‘area’. It is this that we must place the majority of our attention.
  • Take a look at this area. How does it ‘feel’? Does it feel cluttered, dusty, or stagnant? All of these are Feng Shui no-nos.
  • How the eastern part of our house is will mirror how our bodies are doing also. Look for any broken, cracked, or worn out appliances, furniture, tiles or other house components. These should be repaired immediately.
  • In Feng Shui, dust (and clutter) are almost symbolic of illness. Do a thorough sweep of your eastern quadrants, clearing all dust, grime, clutter, and unused things to make a fresh start. Move furniture to get to hard to reach areas.
  • As well as applying this study to the eastern section of our house, the same rules apply to the eastern section of our whole property (including our gardens), and our most important room - our bedroom. Draw an accurate 3 x 3 grid over these plans too, and treat both areas with the same care and attention as your house quadrant.

The Elements

  • In Feng Shui, individual elements either hurt or promote the part of one’s life represented by each section. For the health zones above, which have the element wood, water is particularly beneficial (as trees require water to survive). Pictures of gentle water or healthy trees are excellent here, whilst ictures of dead trees, or death or danger in any form, should be removed. Blue and black (representing water), as well as green (representing wood) are excellent colors to decorate with. However, dried plants, skeletons or shells are not conducive to good health - as these are from dead, not alive, bodies.
  • The most beneficial thing in this area is obviously real, healthy, abundant indoor plants in this area. Their health will mirror your own, so take good care of them!
  • The ‘enemy’ to the wood element - and to our health - is metal. For this reason, you should remove as many metal objects from your eastern quadrants as possible. All knives, metal benches and appliences, swords, and other sharp or metallic things should go. It is not always possible, but white (representing metal) should also be minimized in this area.

Poison Arrows

  • Another important health consideration in Feng Shui is the effect of “poison arrows“. Particularly facing the front door or bedroom windows, a poison arrow is anything sharp, long, or representative of a spear or arrow pointing at your door. Remove any such item, or if it is unmovable (such as an external tree, telegraph pole, or church steeple), protect yourself with a feng shui mirror that you sometimes see on people’s front doors (this deflects the negative energy).
  • Similar to poison arrows is the dangerous no-no of sleeping with our feet pointed at our bedroom door. It is said that this ’sucks’ the energy out of us as we sleep. Repositioning our beds will help.

Take note of any changes that occur after you make definite Feng Shui shifts as mentioned above. If you see responses, sometimes immediately after making changes, you’re on the right track. Don’t be suprised if a solution to your health problem comes up on the TV, or overheard in conversation, soon after making such a shift.

Take greater care at pivotal times, such as opening test results, or before seeing a doctor. With Feng Shui, you are actively creating your reality.

There are more advanced Feng Shui cures, that involve more individual and complicated astronomical and birthdate calculations. If you are serious about finding a Feng Shui ‘cure’, read books or consult a qualified Feng Shui professional.

If you want to take this further, there are excellent Feng Shui books (see Amazon), websites (try TaoismToday.com on for size), and professionals out there that can make a real shift in your health reality.

Have you had any experience with shifting your health using Feng Shui?