healingways
Aid to Conventional Treatment
As recently as 1990, the idea of using any form of energy medicine, such as acupuncture, Reiki, Touch for Health or the services of a medical intuitive in a hospital setting would have been con- sidered preposterous. Today, however, more medical institutions are combin- ing these types of treatment with tradi- tional allopathic medicine.
For example, Children’s Memorial Hospital, in Chicago, a research-orient- ed emblem of Western medicine, now employs a Healing Touch therapist. The hospital, which perennially ranks among America’s premier hospitals, is the principal pediatric teaching hospital for Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine.
HONORING OUR LIFE FORCE
ENERGY MEDICINE HELPS RESTORE BALANCE AND HARMONY by Linda Sechrist
I
n William James’ famous hypothesis, “A new idea is first condemned as ridiculous, and then dismissed as
trivial, until finally, it becomes what everybody knows.” In the field of energy medicine, the experiences of pioneers such as medical intuitives Caroline Myss and Donna Eden, natural healer Dr. Carolle Jean-Murat and Doctor of Chiropractic Eric Pearl validate James’ postulate. Initially disregarded by allopathic
medicine, the energy medicine these healers practice operates on the belief that changes in the “life force” of the body can affect human health and heal-
50 Collier/Lee Counties
ing. They maintain that applying this energetic perspective allows them to clinically assess and treat what they refer to as the body’s electromagnetic fields, in order to achieve a healthy balance in the body’s overall energy system. The modality has to do with energy
pathways, or meridians, that run through our organs and muscles. The idea is to uncover the root causes of imbalances and harmonize them at an energetic level before they completely solidify in the physical body and manifest as an illness. Such imbalances may be brought on by, for example, such things as emo- tional stress and physical trauma.
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Dr. Mehmet Oz, a leading U.S. cardiovascular surgeon, was the first to include a Reiki practitioner in his de- partment at Columbia University Medi- cal Center, in New York City. The New York Times reports that Oz allows the use of Reiki during open-heart surgeries and heart transplant operations.
More Insight
Medical intuitives say they can recog- nize problems in the flow of the body’s energies and are able to accurately predict the kinds of physical problems that are likely to emerge before any symptoms are detected. Eden, who has had a lifelong ability to make health as- sessments that are confirmed by medi- cal tests, can look at an individual’s body and see and feel where the ener- gies are not flowing, out of balance or not in harmony, then works to correct the problem.
“I was 22 before I discovered that everyone didn’t make their decisions after first seeing and sensing energy,” says Eden.
Carolle Jean-Murat, a California licensed obstetrician and gynecolo- gist who now practices as a medical intuitive and healer, left her 30-year allopathic practice to focus on natural healing. Today, the native of Haiti spe- cializes in helping women restore their mental, physical and spiritual health. “I am a healer who has the capacity to see, feel and hear whatever a client is
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