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Inner and Outer Knowledge

I am a learner. Learning fuels me, keeps me going. I’d be dead if I wasn’t always learning. While I’m most interested in health topics, I also care about world affairs and cultures, animals, nature, physics, chemistry, and more.  But I’m not interested in knowledge for knowing’s sake. I want to seek information that I can apply to help myself, my family, or others.

Over the years, I’ve come to realize that while I’m driven to seek the wisdom set forth by others before me, that I, and each of us, has an inner wisdom that should not be discounted or overlooked.   However, I’m not saying that my inner wisdom is like having an Albert Einstein or know-it-all at my disposal.  The wisdom I refer to is the heart of Chinese Medicine – the way that we fit into nature and the universe, and that somewhere inside me I know the best choices and that it’s my mind that bars the truth from being manifested.

Instead, I believe we must mine our inner selves for the buried knowings we carry with us as part of our divine nature.  Quiet introspection, whether in formal meditation or through mindfulness, allows our inner wisdom to bubble up to the surface of consciousness, where we can harvest it with our minds.  I find this to be a daily exercise, the process of getting to know myself.  I have been kind of amazed at how I feel like I’m just really getting to know myself now, in my late 30’s!  But with that realization came the understanding that it will take my lifetime to really get to know myself fully, if I’m lucky enough to live that long!

I am happy that in my field, I can tap my intuition, that inner wisdom, when I interact with my patients.  I can use my inner eye to see my patient more wholly, and go beyond the facts to catch underlying aspects and really get deeper with healing.  A big part of what I love about holistic medicine is how intimate it is.  I believe that connection forged between myself and my patient becomes part of the healing.

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An Obsession or a Preoccupation?

You may have noticed from my posts that I love to cook.  I love to eat.  I love to share my passion for healthy eating!  I know how daunting it can be to change the way you eat.  Trust me, I’ve been through it all.  Over the years of changing my habits and striving for better health, I’ve learned a few things.

One thing I’ve learned over the years, is that food is not the only thing we consume.  We eat attitudes, words, thoughts, emotions, and the ambience surrounding our food.   It may seem abstract but it’s fundamental biology that if we are tense or in fight or flight, then the digestive system shuts down to shunt its energy to our muscles, etc.  So that’s one thing you can do right now today.  I recommend getting a book about mindful eating at the library.  Thich Nat Hanh has one, and there is Yoga of Eating by Charles Eisenstein.

Another thing I’ve learned is that big changes like what and how we eat is not an overnight thing.  That change is most likely to be successful if we have support – whether it’s a professional, friend, or family member to hold you accountable and be a cheerleader for you.  We sometimes want reassurance that the sacrifice is worth it, that we’re making a choice that will have a positive impact.  If you know someone else struggling with their health you can see if they’ll partner with you so you are not doing it alone. Ideally the people you live with support this, but we can’t control anyone but ourselves so you cannot count on that.  I am always glad to provide that support as your coach, as well.

So be patient with yourself, try new foods, relax, and have fun! I never knew 20 years ago the foods I’d be loving now!

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Auriculotherapy – Takeaways from Rockville

I just returned from a 3-day seminar in the Washington DC metro area taught by Dr. Raphael Nogier.  He is the son of the famous creator of Auriculotherapy, Dr. Paul Nogier of Lyons, France.  What a weekend! I was humbled to learn from one of the greats of the past half century.  Auriculotherapy is not Chinese acupuncture, but a system based on physics, embryology, and neurology.  Developed in France over the past 60 years, auriculotherapy uses needles, light frequencies, electricity, and pulse to treat a very wide variety of acute and chronic physical and mental-emotional disorders on just the ear.

I am bursting with excitement to start implementing the elegant, simple, yet powerful techniques to take my practice to a new level.  Here are some of the conditions we learned to treat with just the ear, although these are just to name a few of the many.

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Sciatica

Chronic Shoulder Pain

Menstrual Cramps

Learning disorders

Stomach Ulcers

Chronic Tendonitis

Migraines

 

My belief that food senstivities are often implicated were validated by Dr Nogier’s many years of clinical experience resolve asthma, alopecia, MS, and other conditions by finding and eliminating trigger foods.

 

I will be glad to talk with you about how Auriculotherapy can help you or your loved ones!

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The Art of Limin’

A few years ago we went on vacation to Anguilla, a desert island in the Caribbean.  It was the most middle of nowhere place I’d been, with not much going on.  We had to fly into another island and take a little speedboat over which they called a ferry.  It was beautiful in a desolate way as far as the landscape.  Lots of sand, sand, sand.

We stayed at a very chic hotel, and the some of the staff was local.  I remember one staffmember in particular, because she was by the pool every day. I think her name was Marlene.  She had short skinny dreads and a relaxed smile.  It seemed she loved her job hanging out at the pool, even if we were a bunch of tourists.  But the one thing that I remember most was one word she taught me.  Limin’. This is what they say instead of chillin’.  “What’s going on?” someone says to you, and you say “M’just limin'”.

 

So back here in the US the climate is different, and the length of the To-Do-List is much longer.  In Anguilla, people have had to learn to pass the time.  Here, we don’t have enough of it.  It’s a constant struggle to check off our tasks before the next day dawns.

 

Part of our stressed out culture I think stems from the mere vastness of humanity in the 21st century.  There’s a lot of us, plain and simple.  That makes for a ton of competition – if I don’t do IT, someone else will.  So we burn our candles at both ends, and sometimes it’s sleep that we skimp on, and sometimes it’s convenience foods from Starbucks or Subway or McDonald’s or Lean Cuisines.

This pressure to DO all the time, has robbed us of our natural need to just be limin’.  Can you imagine just sitting around for a couple hours a day?  Chickens already got fed, meal is already simmering for dinner, kids have helped do all the chores.  Maybe it’s too hot to work.  Maybe it’s too cold… All the reasons why back in the day limin’ was probably a part of human life, like it still is in some more laid back parts of the world.

 

So my message here, is let’s remember it’s ok to just chill, to just be, and that there is actually value in it.  Can you think of a famous person who discovered something important while just limin’? Or can you imagine what just being could do for you? At the least, it allows us space to breath, observe, and notice what is going on around us on a small level, and even what is going on inside us, at the cellular and energetic levels.   Try it.  I’d love to hear what happens when you let nothin’ happen!

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My Personal Journey

I’m often asked, what made you decide to go into this field?

I usually say “It was a process of elimination.  I could not imagine myself doing anything else, but I could imagine myself doing this.”  That’s part of it. But there’s more.

When I was a freshman in high school, I got pretty sick.  Bad abdominal pain, exhaustion, weight loss, loose stools.  I will never forget the PE teacher taking me aside, and telling me that I looked like a ghost, and if I was ok.  I hadn’t realized I’d lost a lot of weight and my face had turned pale.

That year I was diagnosed with Crohn’s Disease and put on a series of anti-inflammatory and antibiotic medications.  When I was 16 my pediatric gastroenterologist put me on a round of Prednisone, a strong steroid, to suppress my immune system as Crohn’s is an autoimmune disorder.

I stayed on these medications, until one day my junior year of college, I went on a three week camping trip, and suddenly stopped taking the medications.  All of them.  I remember I had a bad flare-up, then I was ok.  I started learning about other ways to take care of my body thanks to a guy I started seeing (and yes you guessed it I married him years later).  I learned that diet, homeopathy, acupuncture, and herbs could all aid healing my digestive system.

Since that day in May 17 years ago, I have not taken a prescription medication for Crohn’s disease and have not had a single flare up. I reversed my autoimmune condition! This is not to say everything was hunky dory and my health has been perfect.  It’s a continual journey, challenges become my learning opportunities, and I strive to be strong, healthy, and happy every step along the way.

I hope that by sharing my story, I can inspire you or give you hope that things can get better.  A medical diagnosis is not a dooming sentence for misery.  Take charge of your health, be your own advocate, and always know that you can feel better!

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