By Elizabeth Scott, MS — 2020
The goal is not to relieve the pain completely, but to get to know it and learn from it so you can better manage it.
Read on www.verywellmind.com
CLEAR ALL
When you look at me what do you see? Join Olivia as she explains her journey of having chronic illnesses. Olivia contextualizes her experience through spoon theory.
1
In this video, Peter Levine will share how he helped uncover an incomplete traumatic response that was stuck in the body.
7
Anthony William, Medical Medium, has helped tens of thousands of people heal from ailments that have been misdiagnosed or ineffectively treated or that doctors can’t resolve.
Chronic illness creates many challenges, from career crises and relationship issues to struggles with self-blame, personal identity, and isolation.
In Yoga Cures, Tara Stiles—owner of Strala Yoga in Manhattan—offers an A-to-Z guide of the poses you can do to target specific problems in your body and get you feeling better right away.
Wired for healing sheds light on how trauma causes the brain to disorganize neural circuits and shares triumphant stories of recovery of people who have been liberated from chronic and mysterious illnesses through remapping the brain.
With just five minutes of meditation a day, you can dial down that constant inner chatter and turn up the volume of your true positive essence.
Praying is talking to the Universe. Meditation is listening to it.
The mental and emotional effects of living day after day, year after year with chronic pain are very real and can a lot of times be just as bad or even worse than the actual physical pain.
Meditation practice isn't about trying to throw ourselves away and become something better. It's about befriending who we are already.