Energy

• Does our environment
affect your body's subtle energy field?
• Do you wake up with a sore back and tired
every morning?
• Do you feel unexplainable tired in the afternoons?
• Do you get fatigued quickly after a brief
exertion?
• Do you find it difficult to get over colds?
• Do you feel hungry all the time?
In today's world there are over
80,000 harmful manmade chemical substances permeating
our life space. They are found in the air
we breathe, the water
we drink, and the food we eat. Regulatory agencies
attempt to warn us of these dangers by establishing
maximum levels of exposure for each substance. However,
there is no standard for maximum exposure of the accumulated
effects. For example, one cigarette burn will not
kill you but an accumulated ten-thousand cigarette
burns may.
Unfortunately there is very little that can be done
about it. We as a society have resigned ourselves
to accept that we are slowly being killed by our environment.
We have all accepted our backaches, allergies, high-stress
levels and an overall decrease in the quality of life.
It's just the way it is. Right? We don't think so!
by Jule Klotter
Although many doctors and researchers have noted that
emotion and belief systems play a part, perhaps a
major part, in health and illness, Western medicine
is just beginning to consider such non-physiological
factors in the treatment of disease. Emotion, beliefs,
and other non-physical qualities, such as creativity,
intuition, and wisdom, originate in the dynamic chaos
of the energy field, the aura, the vital life energy
that surrounds and permeates each physical body. Each
energy field constantly interacts with the fields
of other living beings and with stimuli in the environment.
Everything that affects the body must first pass through
this field. Some of the information contained in the
field enters our awareness via our senses, thoughts,
or intuition. Much of the information, however, remains
hidden, affecting the choices we make and our physiology.
In her study of the human energy field, Dr. Valerie
Hunt recorded brain waves, blood pressure changes,
galvanic skin responses, heartbeat, and muscle contractions
of subjects while aura readers observed changes in
the energy field. Hunt states that changes occurred
in the field before any of the other systems changes.
(See Review, TLfDP #150, p. 124-26).
At the core of all matter lies energy, and the human
body is no different. The energy body is a template
for the physical body. Emotional energy resonates
with life experiences, personal and professional relationships,
and belief systems and becomes literally encoded in
cell tissue. According to neurobiologist Candace Pert,
emotionally-charged thoughts and experiences cause
the body to manufacture different neuropeptides, chemicals
triggered by emotions. Researchers at the Institute
of HeartMath (Boulder, Colorado) found that heartful
emotions (even emotions associated with memories)
raise DHEA and IgA levels while negative emotions
lower both. However we use our life energy, whether
we use it to promote bitterness and fear or joy and
love, manifests in our biology. Prolonged dissonance
or weakness in the field leads to physical symptoms
and, sometimes, to illness. Cure, without remission,
depends upon relieving the disturbed energetics that
underlie the physical condition. How does one address
energetic factors that cannot be weighed, viewed under
a microscope, or predicted? In this article, I hope
to provide some guidelines or, at least, to stimulate
an expanded view of health.
Many natural health techniques benefit the energy
body as well as the physical one. Whole foods are
rich with electromagnetic energy. Exercise, deep breathing,
Qigong, Tai Chi, yoga, gardening, walking barefoot
on earth, and prayer and meditation strengthen the
energy field. Acupuncture, homeopathy, flower essences,
deep muscle massage like Rolfing, Therapeutic Touch,
Reiki, sound therapy, and other forms of energy medicine
strive to address imbalances and blocks at the energy
level of the body. These energy therapies can nudge
an incoherent field into normalcy. Love, compassion,
forgiveness are also powerful healing forces. Many
doctors are aware that spiritual, mental, and emotional
factors play a major role in illness and health; but,
their training has emphasized the physical, and they
often feel at a loss as to how to address the spirit.
Medical intuitive Caroline Myss (pronounced Mace),
who has worked for many years with C. Norman Shealy,
MD, teaches about non-physical factors that affect
health and spirit. In her book Anatomy of the Spirit
and in taped lectures, Myss discusses a framework
for addressing spiritual needs and lessons that affect
well-being. As I reviewed her work, I found guidelines
for maintaining health of the energy body, just as
natural medicine has basic principles for physical
health.
Caroline Myss became a medical intuitive in January
1982, after a spontaneous out-of-body experience.
She had never desired healing powers; this new ability
was very much an unwelcome, although intriguing, gift
that she preferred to keep hidden. Grand Design had
other plans. When she moved to New Hampshire to start
Stillpoint Publishing with two partners, word spread
about the insights that popped into her head whenever
she heard about someone who was ill. People began
to ask her to use her intuition to assess their health.
Myss was extremely uncomfortable with her new therapeutic
role; she did not like the responsibility that accompanied
it, and she worried about the reliability of this
talent. "In those early days the impressions
I received," she explains in Anatomy of the Spirit,
"were mainly of a person's immediate physical
health and the related emotional or psychological
stress. But I could also see the energy surrounding
that person's body. I saw it filled with information
about that person's history."
In May 1984, C. Norman Shealy, MD, neurosurgeon, developer
of TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation
device for pain relief), and founder of the American
Holistic Medical Association, decided to test her.
He called with a patient's name and age. Myss responded
with images since she did not know physiology. Over
the next year, Shealy called for more evaluations
and helped her learn anatomy so that she could describe
her perceptions with greater precision. Her years
as an "apprentice intuitive" (1983-1989)
and then as a professional intuitive, who worked with
fifteen different physicians including Shealy and
Christiane Northrup, taught her that no illness develops
randomly.
Myss reviewed the intuitive assessments she had made
over the years (primarily for adults), looking for
emotional and psychological patterns among the various
illnesses. Eventually, Myss presented these patterns
in The Creation of Health (Stillpoint 1988), a book
that she co-authored with Shealy (Reviewed inTLfDP
#89, p.817+ & #125, p. 1260-62). These patterns
give practitioners a place to start when trying to
figure out the energetics of a patient's condition.
For example, Myss says that chronic fatigue syndrome,
energetically a disorder of the first chakra, affects
people who feel very vulnerable and insecure. These
people try to be all things to all people, and they
connect to more people and projects than they have
energy for. They finance too many people and/or projects
with their energy, and the immune system weakens.
The energetic component of cancer consists of unfinished
or incomplete business. People with cancer tend to
be more connected to the past than to the present.
When energy is used to keep one's past alive instead
of in the present where it is needed to maintain cell
tissue, malignancy develops.
Wherever thought goes, energy and life force follow.
Many of us are aware of energy circuits in the form
of emotional ties and bonding to other human beings
and to pets. We are less aware of how much energy
we spend on past injuries, regrets, and losses. The
thoughts that occupy one's mind indicate where energy
is flowing. When thoughts contain an underlying fear
of loss or over-identification with an object or person,
energy is being lost. Being "hooked" on
people or objects in a way that causes one to lose
power means that "energy circuits are so thoroughly
connected to the target that they no longer have the
use of their own reasoning ability." (See Figure
1)
How do we disconnect our energy circuits from people
or objects that sap energy? The first step is awareness.
Check in often and notice where your thoughts are.
Are they with you in the present, or have they drifted
off to the past, the future, or with some person or
object? Next, mentally cut the connection and literally
call your spirit back. Calling one's spirit back is
not a one-time event; it's a practice. (I speak from
experience.) Counseling can be helpful for those struggling
to let go of harmful attachments. Benefit from counseling
can be enhanced by using flower essences, which work
at the energy level to bring emotions and mental patterns
to conscious awareness so that they can be released.
"From an energy point of view, every choice that
enhances our spirits strengthens our energy field;
and the stronger our energy field, the fewer our connections
to negative people and experiences," writes Myss.
How do we know what enhances our spirits?
Follow whatever intuitively feels good, has good "vibes,"
stirs up enthusiasm, and sends the soul, as Bernie
Siegel says, "live messages." Illness can
develop because a person is too negative - dwells
on resentments, guilt, or burdensome thoughts to an
extent that the negativity harms his/her biological
well-being. Unless negative emotions, thoughts, beliefs,
and/or negative use of one's personal power are released,
energy dysfunction will continue; and, illness and
physical symptoms are likely to recur. Not everyone
who becomes sick is responding to too much negativity
in his/her field. For some, illness signifies the
beginning of a spiritual journey. It presents a challenge
that will encourage them to develop and grow in spirit.
Although people often blame themselves for becoming
ill, Myss does not believe that such blame is accurate
or fair. Myss says we are beginning to get a vision
of co-creating our reality; but, except for holy people
like Sai Baba, we are not capable of that kind of
control. Although we cannot control what happens to
us, we can affect the quality of our response. Rather
than blame oneself or dwell on "why me,"
both of which drain energy, the focus can be on what
can be learned through this experience. How can I
lighten my emotional life and enliven my soul? Many
people who ultimately die from a disease find the
journey to death a tremendously healing experience
because of their attitude and the many opportunities
to forgive, make amends, and release old patterns.
Blame, even self-blame, depletes one's energy field.
Forgiveness restores it.
Few pay as much attention to their energy as they
do to physical needs and pains. Myss wrote her book
Anatomy of the Spirit to encourage people to think
of themselves as energy beings as well as physical
ones. The energy body, or spirit, is primarily expressed
through seven important chakras, energy centers, located
near the central nervous system. Eastern medicine
has long recognized the existence of chakras, which
are located in joints, nerve ganglion, and endocrine
glands, and of meridians, energy pathways that run
along the body's surface.
Eastern spiritual tradition identifies each of the
seven chakras with specific challenges that arise
during the quest for spiritual consciousness.
The first
chakra, at the base of the spine, relates to the
material world .
The second chakra, just below the belly button,
deals with creation energy, sexuality, work, and
physical desire.
The third chakra, at the solar plexus, holds lessons
concerning the ego, personality, and self-esteem.
The fourth chakra lies at the heart and contains
lessons about forgiveness, compassion, and love.
The fifth chakra, at the base of the throat, relates
to the use of will and self-expression.
The sixth chakra, or "third eye" in
the center of the forehead, deals with wisdom,
insight, and intuition.
The seveneth chakra, the lessons of the crown
chakra at the top of the head concern spirituality. |
After several years of conducting intuitive
evaluations, Myss realized that she was unconsciously
focusing on the seven main chakras. For some time,
she puzzled over the chakras and Eastern spiritual
tradition. If this path held truth for all humans,
why didn't Western spiritual tradition have an equivalent?
One day she wrote the seven chakras on a board for
a workshop that she was teaching. Before her eyes,
Myss saw the seven sacraments of the Catholic church
float into place, corresponding to the seven chakras,
soon joined by the ten sefirot of the Jewish Kabbalah
or Tree of Life. These ten qualities have traditionally
been organized into seven levels. Myss' unfamiliarity
with the Islam tradition prevented her from including
it in her book. Myss notes that "[w]hereas the
sacraments and the chakras begin with the base as
the number one and count upward, the ten sefirot begin
with the number one at the top...and flows downwardÉthe
qualities attributed to each of the seven levels are
virtually identical." Learning to embody these
qualities while facing life's challenges is the essence
of the spiritual journey. Viewing illness and crises
as a chance to exercise these spiritual truths brings
a level of meaning to the experience that accelerates
healing.
Myss says that, energetically, disease begins in the
lower three chakras, the ones that deal with external
power. Unresolved conflicts with one's family and/or
tribe (any group to which one belongs that provides
a feeling of security), feelings of vulnerability
about survival and access to life necessities, and
being ruled by what "they" say instead of
remaining true to one's path, create discord in the
first chakra. Anatomically, the
first chakra relates to physical body support,
the base of the spine, legs, bones, feet, rectum,
and the immune system. The people developing the autoimmune
disease AIDS, says Myss, are those who feel victimized
by their society (homosexuals and drug addicts) or
who have feelings of vulnerability about survival
(the poor of Africa). Self-respect, a sense of personal
honor, feeds strong positive energy to the root chakra,
bones, legs, and immune system. The first chakra,
also, asks us to honor the tribe/family we were born
into - even if life's journey has pushed us to move
on.
The second chakra gets
disrupted by stifled creative energy, money and sexual
conflicts, power struggles, life energy directed into
dead-end relationships or jobs, and control tactics
that do not follow the rule to "Honor One Another."
This chakra holds instances of prostitution, rape,
and incest, both the literal traumas and the more
common energetic occurrences. Many men and women become
aware, at some point in their lives, of remaining
in a disempowering situation for money or physical
security, prostituting their energy. We are less aware
of the energetic equivalents of rape and incest that
come in the form of verbal abuse and destructive,
disempowering attitudes that we direct towards others
or vice versa. "Rape and incest of an energy
field," writes Myss, "are motivated by the
desire to cripple a person's ability to be independent
and thrive outside the control of another person."
Physical organs most affected by second chakra issues
include sexual organs, large intestine, lower vertebrae,
pelvis, appendix, bladder, and hip area. Fear of losing
control and fear of power can eventually manifest
as ailments such as chronic pain in the lower back
and pelvic area, arthritis, prostate or ovarian cancer,
impotency, and bladder problems. Learning to honor
others, instead of trying to control or dominate them,
eases much of the struggle held in the second chakra.
"The spiritual challenge of the second chakra,"
says Myss, "is to learn to interact consciously
with others: to form unions with people who support
our development and to release relationships that
handicap our growth."
The lesson of the third chakra
is about self-responsibility and self-respect. This
chakra houses both survival intuition, which warns
of danger and negative action or energy coming from
others, and self-esteem, without which intuitive guidance
is ignored and discounted. Myss has found that depression
often originates when people lose self-respect because
they have broken a promise to themselves. Issues concerning
self-responsibility, caring for oneself and others,
self-esteem, fear of rejection, and an over-sensitivity
to criticism eventually manifest as ailments in the
abdomen, stomach, upper intestines, liver, gallbladder,
kidney, pancreas, adrenal glands, spleen, and middle
spine. Myss has also found that arthritis, anorexia,
and bulimia often relate to third chakra issues. The
third chakra demands that we honor ourselves and that
we respect the everyday survival information we receive
from our intuition.
Valerie Hunt refers to the third
chakra as the emotional body, the area through
which emotions located in the aura, such as fear and
anger, enter the body. One of my many, favorite stories
in Myss' Anatomy of the Spirit illustrates fear and
the third chakra. When Myss met Ruth, the 75 year-old,
Jewish woman was confined to a wheelchair because
of arthritis. Ruth was 38 when her husband died, leaving
her with two daughters to raise. Afraid of being alone
and being responsible for herself, Ruth said that
she did everything she could "to keep my daughters
near me so I would never have to take care of myself."
When her older daughter joined a Buddhist community
at age 22, Ruth kept asking "After all I've given
up for you, how could you do this to me?" Finally,
in one such conversation, the daughter admitted, in
response to Ruth's accusation, that she had tried
drugs. On impulse, Ruth asked her daughter to get
her some.
At age 55, Ruth took LSD and had an out-of-body experience,
in which she met "a lovely being who said she
was my angel. She complained to me, 'Ruthie, Ruthie,
do you know how difficult it is to be your angel?'"
Ruth saw a replica of herself bound with thousands
of rubber bands; and, the angel told her that each
rubber band was a fear that was controlling her: "You
have so many fears that you can never hear me trying
to talk to you, to tell you that I've got everything
under control." The angel handed Ruth a pair
of scissors and suggested that she free herself -
which Ruth did with great delight. Before Ruth returned
to her body, the angel let Ruth see the future in
which she would be crippled with arthritis. "She
couldn't tell me why I would have to endure this condition,
just that I would have to. But she said she would
be with me every step of the way," Ruth told
Myss. "[A]fter that experience I never felt afraid
again. I believe that my physical condition [which
began about 10 years after the out-of-body experience]
is a way to remind me never to have fear." In
giving her condition meaning, Ruth turned a handicap
into a source of inspiration.
The fourth chakra, the
heart chakra, contains lessons about love, commitment,
compassion, forgiveness and about hatred, resentment,
bitterness, grief, anger, loneliness, and self-centerness.
Holding onto the negative emotions, whether they are
directed towards oneself or others, or intentionally
causing pain for other people saps life energy from
body and soul. Fear, also, drains and disrupts heart
energy. Fear of loneliness, commitment, betrayal,
fear of the inability to protect oneself emotionally,
and of 'following one's heart' contribute to dysfunctions
involving the heart and circulatory system, lungs,
upper back, shoulders and arms, ribs, breasts, diaphragm,
thymus gland. Tapping into the energy of love reduces
fear. Love is a potent healing force for body and
spirit, as many doctors recognize.
While heart energy resides at the fourth chakra, the
mind and intellect come through the sixth chakra,
located at the center of the forehead. Feelings of
inadequacy, unwillingness to self-examine one's fears
and shadows, and fear of truth contribute to physical
dysfunctions involving the brain, nervous system,
eyes, ears, nose, pineal gland, and pituitary gland.
Myss says: "The energy pulsating from this chakra
continually directs us to evaluate the truth and integrity
of our beliefs. As we instinctively know from birth,
to have faith in anything or in anyone that lacks
integrity contaminates our spirits and our bodies."
The fifth chakra, positioned
at the base of the throat, acts as a focal point for
the heart energy of the fourth chakra and the mind
energy of the sixth chakra. Its energy relates to
willpower and the power of choice, the most basic
manifestation of self-expression. Every area of our
lives, including health and illness, is directly affected
by the choices we make and how we make them. Clear
decisions and true authority, as epitomized by King
Solomon, come when the truth and wisdom of the sixth
chakra is supported and in agreement with the
emotional power of the heart chakra.
Before we make a choice, we often experience a contest,
a struggle, between the emotional and mental sides
of ourselves. That struggle disrupts the throat chakra.
Prolonged disruption can manifest as physical dysfunctions
that involve the throat, thyroid, trachea, neck vertebrae,
mouth, teeth and gums, esophagus, parathyroid, and
hypothalamus. Such disruptions also play a role in
addiction. Without the balance and joined power of
head and heart, the will lacks a leader to follow;
so, it goes out in search of something to pledge its
energy to, taking the form of an addiction. In her
book, Myss writes: "The
symbolic challenge of the Willpower chakra is to progress
through the maturation of will: from the tribal perception
that everyone and everything around you has authority
over you; through the perception that you alone have
authority over you; to the final perception, that
true authority comes from aligning yourself to God's
will."
The seventh chakra,
at the crown of the head, relates to values, courage,
humanitarianism, and the ability to see a larger pattern.
It is the chakra of inspiration, spirituality and
devotion, and the ability to trust life. Its lessons
aim to teach us how to live in the present moment.
According to Myss, energy therapies, such as reflexology,
acupuncture, and homeopathy are treatments of present
time. People whose energy is tied to the past do not
receive much benefit from these therapies. They must
first call their energy into the present by releasing
the past through forgiveness of others, oneself, or
an experience. Extreme sensitivities to light, sound,
and other environmental factors, chronic exhaustion
that is not linked to a physical disorder, and mystical
depression that comes when one feels spiritually bereft
signify disruptions in the crown chakra.
Caroline Myss' discussion of these seven chakras gives
practitioners a thought-provoking format for working
with non-physical issues that affect health. Integrity,
honor, love, forgiveness, and right use of power fuel
the energetic and physical body of all human beings,
whether or not they respond to Eastern, Jewish, or
Christian spirituality.
After years of doing energetic readings for others,
Caroline Myss is now teaching individuals to use intuition
to evaluate their own health. Intuition is not a special
talent or gift. Everyone has gut-level, third chakra
intuition, says Myss; it is a survival skill. Intuition
is a spontaneous knowing that tells us to trust or
distrust someone, to be cautious in a given situation
or to "go for it!" Intuition is the means
through which we know if we are happy or unhappy about
something and if our energy is being fed, or if it
is being drained. Accepting intuitive information
and acting on it requires self-esteem and courage.
Self- esteem, like intuition, corresponds to the third
chakra. Honoring intuitive urgings in the smallest
matters strengthens self-esteem and one's trust in
the information, making it possible to follow intuitive
guidance in more stressful situations.
Many factors can block intuition or distort its accuracy.
People often discount intuitive guidance, burying
the information beneath rationalization, disbelief,
and fear. The information feels threatening when it
conflicts with a person's belief system, tribal loyalties,
or desire for a safe and happy future. Private agendas
- the desire to see things in a certain way - interfere
with the reception of energy information. Myss says
that one of the biggest problems that people have
in using intuition is the expectation that intuitive
guidance comes loud and clear, as if some angel, standing
next to a burning bush, will shout instructions to
them. In reality, intuition comes as simple impulses
and urgings: I like this, I don't like this, Yes,
No. As agendas and desires for life to proceed in
a desired, controllable way are released, perception
and interpretation of intuitive hunches become clearer
and more accurate.
Intuition often urges us to take a frightening leap
of faith into the unknown. Fear and a desire for safe,
non-threatening information keep many people from
paying attention to valuable hunches. Intuitive advice
does not guarantee a mistake-free, prosperous, love-filled,
happily-ever-after life. It does, however, offer a
means of learning what is true for you as an individual.
Energy does not lie, but interpreting it accurately
requires detachment from fear. Myss says: "Most
people who come to me for an evaluation have already
intuited themselves that something is wrong.... Their
abilities are as accurate as mine; these people know
they are ill. But since I do not share their fear,
my intuitions can interpret their data better than
they themselves can." Myss credits this quality
of objectivity as being a primary reason behind Shealy's
finding that her diagnoses were correct 93% of the
time.
Medical self-diagnosis involves becoming familiar
with a skill we already have. Medical intuition interprets
how electromagnetic information contained in the energy
field that surrounds the body is affecting a person's
physical reality, including health. To check one's
own energy field, Myss suggests focusing on each chakra
with the question "Am I losing energy here?"
If the answer is affirmative, the next question is
"Why am I losing power?" Grab any image,
thought, or impression that occurs. The trick is to
examine these responses, rather than disregard them
out of fear or because they don't fit a preconceived
notion. Myss advises her students to regard themselves
as information transmitting and receiving stations,
reminding them that when it comes to energy, there
are no secrets.
Myss' work as a medical intuitive has given her a
unique perspective on the energetics of why people
do not heal. Myss says that she used to think that
everyone wanted to be healed. She no longer believes
that: "Healing is very unattractive." Impediments
to healing include living in the past, refusal to
give up being a victim ("woundology"), and
fear of change. Directing thought and energy to the
past diverts vital life force from existing cells
and organs that need that energy to function and heal.
Healing requires living in the present, taking one's
energy back from past traumas and hurts. Myss says
that the only reason to nurture the past and keep
it alive is because of bitterness about what happened.
Refusing to forgive a past event or person leaks energy
from the body.
Forgiveness heals that leak. Myss says that forgiveness
has little to do with no longer blaming others for
the wounds that they caused. It has more to do with
"releasing the control that the perception of
victimhood has over our psyches." When we can
see a hurtful act as part of life process, as a message
or challenge instead of a personal betrayal, vital
energy flows back into the physical body's energy
circuits.
People don't heal, often, because they have not released
the illusion of being a victim. Too often people hold
onto wounds and grief longer than is healthy. Myss
points to the many support groups, such as incest
support groups, in our society. Ideally, support groups
help the injured make the transition toward wholeness
by providing witnesses who understand their legitimate
pain. Staying in such groups, however, commits one's
energy to the wound, to the past. Too often, people
give power to their wounds because they have found
that it calls forth support from others, which is
interpreted as nurturing. The wounds become a means
of manipulating and controlling others. Leaving wounds
behind and with them all the support and power that
they provide is frightening because, these days, people
tend to relate and bond with others by sharing wounds
rather than through strength and love. To walk into
the present without "wound currency" is
to walk into an unknown world.
Healing often requires making changes in one's lifestyle,
environment, and relationships. Change can be frightening.
In her book, Myss writes: "It is easy to keep
oneself in a holding pattern, claiming that one does
not know what to do next. But that is rarely true.
When we are in a holding pattern, it is because we
know exactly what we should do next, but we are terrified
to act on it...change is frightening, and waiting
for that feeling of safety to come along before one
makes a move only results in more internal torment
because the only way to acquire that feeling of security
is to enter the whirlwind of change and come out the
other end, feeling alive again." Healing demands
action. Eating properly, daily exercise, taking appropriate
medicine are actions that support the physical body.
Releasing the past, leaving stressful jobs or relationships,
honoring one's own individual truth and gifts, and
meditation/spiritual practice are actions that support
the energy body. What supports the one supports the
other because the physical and energetic are inextricably
linked. Even the process of dying, which we all face,
can become a very healing act as old wounds are released
and unfinished business with loved ones is resolved.
We can splice genetic material and track the tiniest
proteins, but we have just begun to learn the anatomy
of the human energy field. I urge each practitioner
and reader to consider the spiritual needs - love,
forgiveness, integrity, right use of power - that
are as important as the food we eat and vitamins we
take. At least, recognize that positive and negative
energies are real forces that affect physiology and
that living with gratitude in a way that respects
individual spiritual integrity enlivens body and soul.
Philosopher Jacob Needleman in his book The Way of
the Physician wrote: "Since it is knowledge plus
vital energy that heals another, the more knowledge
[a practitioner] obtains at the expense of acquiring
access to the higher energies within himself, the
worse his life and practice become."
Anatomy of the Spirit: The Seven Stages of Power
& Healing by Caroline Myss, PhD (Harmony Books,
201 East 50th Street, New York, New York 10022).
Sounds True Audiotaped lecture series: Anatomy
of the Spirit - 2-cassette lecture series with
Caroline Myss that contains a helpful outline of material
in her book.
Energy Anatomy: The Science of Personal Power, Spirituality,
& Health - 6-cassette lecture series with Caroline
Myss that presents detailed explanation of spiritual
anatomy.
Infinite Mind: The Science of Human Vibrations
by Valerie V. Hunt. (Malibu Publishing Co., P.O. Box
4234, Malibu, California 90264).
Invoking the Sacred for Healing, Guidance, Abundance
& Relationships (6 audiocassettes of workshop
with Caroline Myss and Ron Roth that focuses on chakras
1-4) Available from Great Lakes Training Associates,
Inc., P.O. Box 30380, Indianapolis, Indiana 46230-0380.
Phone 317-283-8315.
Why People Don't Heal - 2-cassette lecture
with Caroline Myss on links between personal power
and illness, wound symbols, the four steps to healing,
and overcoming blocks to wellness.
"Unraveling the Biography in Your Biology
- Medical Intuitive Training with Caroline Myss and
C. Norman Shealy" by Richard Leviton. (Intuition,
Vol 1, No.4, p26-31) Intuition Magazine, P.O. Box
460773, San Francisco, California 94146-9804. Phone
415-949-4240.
For information about Caroline Myss workshops and
seminars, contact Holos Institute of Health, Rt. 1,
Box 216, Fairgrove, Missouri 65648. |