Archive for the ‘self healing’ Category

Eliminating the Internal Complaint Department

Friday, April 30th, 2010

A while back my husband and I were in a class where we were asked to spend a day keeping a tally of how often we complained. I thought I was a pretty positive person so this exercise would be pretty easy to do. Oh my gosh, was I surprised to discover how often I was thinking complaining thoughts, though I wasn’t expressing them. I was complaining all right, just not out loud.

We were also asked to notice our patterns of thoughts. Did we tend to complain about other friends, co-workers, politics, our bodies, our helplessness, injustice, past abuses, lovers, etc.? As the class talked about our various thought patterns, it was amazing to realize that we tended to complain about certain types of events or people in our lives with great consistency.

Once I knew my particular pattern, which was complaining about people that didn’t live up to my expectations, I was able to zero in on my internal complaint department and reduce the number of harmful thoughts I was having.

I consciously attended to the nature of my thoughts. The minute I had a negative or blaming thought, I paused long enough to notice the emotion attached to the thought, and then held that emotion in compassion.

In the end, it didn’t matter whether the emotion was connected to me, another person, a group, a political or spiritual view a situation or a concept, simply holding the emotion in compassion diffused it. Once there was no longer any emotional charge, I could then hold the person, situation or concept in love.

Within days, I noticed a dramatic change in my thought habits. I also noticed a dramatic change in my interactions. Rather than responding to people from assumptions I had drawn, I was more inclined to ask questions that would help me gain greater clarity about them and their situations. Of course, there were times when I was still disappointed, but approaching people with compassion, created space for me to help people work through the challenges they were having that were ultimately leading to my disappointment.

Instead of being cranky, I found myself laughing with them about their foibles, working toward creative solutions, adjusting unreasonable expectations, and using the challenges as opportunities for me to respond in more conscious ways.

As a healer, I know that the more energy we put into negative or limiting thoughts about others or ourselves, the more likely we are to create a limiting and negative reality. The converse, of course, is also true. The more energy we put into loving, caring thoughts, the more we attract that reality into our lives.

If I’m blaming someone or something outside of myself for my illness or if I’m angry with myself for my current state of health, I’m distracting myself from the opportunity to access my personal healing energy. I become so engaged and absorbed in the negative energy and the assumptions that usually come with it that I’m denying myself the kind of pure, compassionate feelings that lead to healing discoveries, assistance and desired outcomes. I know because I’ve done it. I’ve been so angry that I have exacerbated injuries and illness. I have also found enough compassion to love myself into wellness.

The exercise was a great reminder that it is wise to periodically check in on your internal complaint department. If it is still in operation, it might be time to change the energy. Perhaps a well-founded complaint is at times appropriate. Perhaps eliminating the complaint department isn’t necessary, but keeping it down to a level where it isn’t frequent or running our thoughts, can only lead to greater peace and opportunities for solutions to the challenges we face.

Discover The Natural Healing Gift of Negative Ions

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

wave1To date, I haven’t met anyone that has told me they can see them, taste them or smell negative ions. Yet, in nature, they are there all around us.

Visit the ocean and you are in the company of negative ions. Visit the mountains, splash around in a stream, or take a walk in the woods and you’ll be breathing in negative ions.

How do you know when you are in the presence of negative ions? You feel better. You relax and you feel more at ease with yourself and with life. That’s because negative ions increase the levels of serotonin in your body. Serotonin affects your moods, and you may find it lifting stress and even, depression. Some people become energized in the presence of negative ions.

Consider this excerpt about negative ions from The Root of All Healing:

“… quite a bit of medical research has been done demonstrating that negative
ions help us simultaneously relax, reduce stress and energize us. Ecstatic, Ltd. in the United Kingdom commissioned a review of literature on the effects of air ions and concluded: ‘The consensus of the literature reviewed is that environmental air ion concentration levels and balance can affect a wide range of biological organisms, including humans. Elevated negative air ion levels are widely reported to have beneficial effects on humans including enhanced feeling of relaxation, and reduced tiredness, stress levels, irritability, depression, and tenseness.’”

http://www.webmd.com/balance/features/negative-ions-create-positive-vibes

If you are having difficulty sleeping, concentrating, feeling energized, relaxing, enjoying life, and opening up to your greatest healing—one of the simplest, sweetest ways to enhance your healing is to spend more time with Mother Earth.

I recommend getting out in nature every day. That’s right. Every day. That’s how beneficial nature is in the healing journey. It is one of the most over-looked prescriptions for healing, and it can be among the most powerful.

Nature slows down those hurried paces we think we have to keep up. Those rushed speeds and stressful lives are contributing to our discomfort and preventing us from relaxing enough for healing to occur.

As I share in my book, “You don’t get to physical health, inner peace or joy through stress and tension.” In order to heal you have to slow down and getting out there in those negative ions is one of the best ways to relax and discover a greater natural source for balanced energy.

You can read more about the benefits of spending time in nature in my book, The Root of All Healing: 7 Steps to Healing Anything— http://misahopkins.com/therootofallhealing/

Reversing “Incurable” Chronic Conditions

Monday, April 5th, 2010

1233If you have an “incurable” chronic condition, you may be asking yourself if there is any possibility that incurable conditions can be reversed. The answer is, “Yes.”

Just because modern allopathic medicine may not have a cure for your chronic condition, doesn’t mean that healing isn’t possible. The journey of self-healing is about discovering the power and the path within you.

If you have read my book, “The Root of All Healing,” you know that when I was faced with MS, I decided I was not going to live with that chronic condition forever. I decided I was not going to lose muscle strength, cognitive abilities, speech, vision, sex drive, or end up in a wheel chair.

I didn’t even become fearful that I might. I simply did not allow myself to spend any time with doubts that tried to creep in. I decided immediately that this was going to be a challenge worth every ounce of my self-healing attention and I went to work.

On the blog here, you’ve probably listened to the audio story about my friend Kevin, who lost actual muscle tissue, yet still rebuilt his knee until he was able to walk normally. Remember, he was told might end up in a wheel chair.

Colds and flu are supposed to be incurable. We are told we just need to ride them out, and yet I have turned both colds and flu around—stopping them in their tracks with sound and intention. I have friends that do the same with their own energy medicine.

How about you? Do you know someone that had an incurable health challenge, yet somehow healed? Have you heard about someone that overcame seemingly overwhelming odds?

For some of us, and maybe for you, overwhelming odds are motivating. Here is the opportunity. “No-known cure” means that it is time to find one—inside of you!

Think of it this way. You don’t have a small hill to climb. For whatever reasons, you have a mountain. But there you are, standing at the base of the mountain looking up. You could walk away and live with the condition. Or you can discover the equipment and tools you already have (inside of you), learn how to use them, find your inner strength and head up the mountain.

You can stay at the bottom of the mountain or climb it. The choice is yours to make. And it helps to know that it IS a choice. Here is the good news. You are passionately loved regardless of what you choose. You can’t fail or make a wrong choice. It is your life. If you have a chronic condition, life is going to be difficult whether you engage your healing power or your don’t. You get to choose how you want to be with the challenge.

Regardless of what you choose, I would offer this for your consideration. When the odds seem overwhelming, open to the abundant, unconditional love that is available to you. Then, whatever you choose, accepting this love will open up reserves of inner strength you may not have realized you have.

Once, when I was feeling quite stuck and meditating with the essence of my stuckness, a wise message came to me. “Open to the marvelous reality waiting for you on the other side of the stuckness.”

I did. And the stuckness vanished. The overwhelming odds disappeared. Soon, I was simply moving forward, grateful for each and every gift that came to help me. The really cool part is that it suddenly was profoundly easy!

I got so used to welcoming in this wonderful reality, I don’t even remember anymore what I was feeling so stuck about! But I can tell you at the time, my sense of overwhelm and doubt consumed me.

May I suggest that you welcome in the wonderful reality waiting for you on the other side of your health challenge. Welcome it in like you would welcome your most dear friend or loved one. If in that welcoming, you feel your healing beckoning you, surrender to the wonder of being at the top of the mountain. Then take one step and another, every day.

When the thought passes through your mind that this condition is incurable and non-reversible, just giggle because you now know a little secret about self-healing. There is something waiting for you to discover, beyond the word “incurable.”

Challenges Aren’t Meant to Limit Us

Monday, March 29th, 2010

self-healing

Have you seen the movie, The Snow Walker? I know I don’t usually recommend films here on this blog, but this one that I watched for the first time the other night, is worth telling you about if you are seriously dedicated to your self-healing.

Now, I’m not going to give away the plot, but I am going to tell you that it is not a film about physical healing. However, it gives you a lot to consider when it comes to understanding what overwhelming challenges do for your spiritual and emotional evolution. In my experience that is what a healing journey is truly all about.

As I watched the movie and considered how small my challenges were in comparison to the life-threatening challenges the characters were dealing with, I was moved to tears in gratitude for the ways challenges have transformed me in the most powerful ways.

Challenges are intended to stimulate and catapult us into greater Divine awakening. We can let them weigh us down into hopelessness, or we can use them to discover who we really are. We can become angry about what seems to have befallen us, or we can greet the challenges with all of their potential to transform us. We can use them to become our worst or our best. It is our journey and our choice.

Some years ago I met a man that told me a seemingly incredible story about a very dramatic healing that he initiated. He had been riding his motorcycle on a stretch of highway where there were too many pot-holes. He hit one of them, which sent him careening on his side.

He lost a lot of muscle tissue in that fall and the doctor told him he would either never walk, or he would walk with some kind of apparatus, such as a walker or cane. He had been an active man and martial artist and the thought of being in a wheel chair or limping throughout his life was unacceptable to him. He decided, through his anger, that wasn’t going to be his story or outcome.

Without even knowing exactly what energy healing was, he set an intention to heal and walk, which included growing back new muscles. Every day, he worked physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually on mending his body. It took some time, but he walks today as though nothing had ever happened.

We let challenges discourage us. We accept illness and injuries as conditions without hope. But they do not have to be.

Yes, some of us do not fully recover from our physical challenges. Some of us die from the illnesses and conditions we have contracted. But we do not have to die discouraged. We can allow our lives to inspire hope and courage in others.

I watched this repeatedly when I taught children many years ago that had conditions for which there were few successful treatments or therapies. Each day they lived, they inspired courage in their families.

They focused on what they could enjoy and give, rather than what they should be getting. They focused on living in the moment rather than fret about a future they might or might not experience. They openly received help from those who were there to offer comfort or assistance in any way. Their short lives were richer than what some of us experience who have lived decades.

Only you can know whether you are here to meet your physical challenges to overcome them or to live with them with inspirational grace. If you decide to watch this movie, notice how each character, in each their own time, embraces their unique challenges and the grace with which they become their most empowered selves.

Reverend Misa is the author of The Root of All Healing: 7 Steps to Healing Anything.

Are You Feeling Emotionally Numb?

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

winterbirdAre you feeling emotionally numb, but your body is in tremendous pain?

When someone asks you how you are feeling, do you shrug your shoulders, not really having a clue about what you are feeling?

It is very likely that because you are not feeling and acknowledging your emotions, they are screaming through your body as pain.

Fear, sorrow and anger simply need proper channels of recognition, and sometimes—expression. If your healing journey is anything like mine, I learned to suppress my feelings in order to protect myself from the intensity of what I was experiencing. I found my true emotions too overwhelming, and in my need to be in control, I did my best not to notice them, until they boiled out of me uncontrollably .

I’ve met people that didn’t think it was spiritually proper to feel angry, jealous or sad, and because those feelings were actually occurring, they suppressed them as a way to live a better spiritual life. What happens in this case is that because the person is not being completely truthful with themselves, the underlying feelings that long to be acknowledged become powerful motivators for unconscious and conscious self-sabotage. This plays out as—I’m doing all the right things, but nothing is working.

I’ve also met people having intense feelings like a deep under-current, but weren’t willing to acknowledge them. This can be a reaction to parents or loved ones that expressed their intense emotions without regard for the people around them—such as a parent lashing out at their child without considering the harm and damage they are doing. However, ignoring the feelings is like swimming in the ocean and ignoring that there is an under-tow. Eventually, the under-tow is going to pull you down.

Unfortunately, so many of us have had such negative experiences with emotions that we become afraid of them and attempt to conduct our lives around them. And yet, there is nothing spiritually or physically healthy about suppressing emotions.

Pent up, unexpressed feelings eventually break out—in bursts of anger, lengthy bouts of depression, and long-term physical illness.

As we discussed in the last article, emotions tell stories about our wounds and our beliefs. They are part of who we are. When we find healthy ways to honor them, we can release years of pent up angst and hurt, along with belief systems that may be limiting our capacity to heal.

There are all kinds of emotional release techniques available today, designed to support you in honoring your emotions, along with the beliefs and stories of our past that accompany them.

This does not mean, you will suddenly start lashing out at everyone around you. That is what happens when you are not honoring your emotions. When you acknowledge your feelings properly, you can then find appropriate ways to release without hurting people around you and without becoming overwhelmed.

You may have discovered that the more you pray for and intend healing, the more emotionally uncomfortable you feel or the more numb you become. These are clues that your illness has a strong footing in emotional trauma.

If you are feeling numb, or you know you are suppressing intense feeling, I suggest you do some research to find a healer or therapist that can support you in doing some emotional release work.

While you are looking for the right healer or therapist, I’d like to suggest you become acquainted with a Creation Meditation that is all about honoring all feelings; allowing difficult feelings to transform naturally in the embrace of your compassion. It is one of the most soothing meditations I’ve ever experienced for calming intense emotions. http://newdreamfoundation.com/forums/index.php/topic,75.0.html

Let me encourage you, to honor your emotional numbness and become acquainted with the emotions running beneath it. Very likely, your emotions are a major key in your healing journey.

Reverend Misa is the author of The Root of All Healing: 7 Steps to Healing Anything.

Use Your Emotions to Help You Heal

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

waterfall1Emotions tell stories about what is really going on. You’ve just got to be willing to sit with the uncomfortable ones long enough and with enough self-honesty to discover  what they are telling you about what you need for your healing.

This is going to make a lot more sense if I share a couple of poignant stories from my life.

Years ago, I was in loving relationship where my sexual energy started to fully awaken and blossom. Naturally, I was grateful to be in a relationship where I could enjoy my sexual expression, and yet at the same time I was emotionally very raw—so raw that I was frequently on fire with anger. I dealt with that anger by either being sarcastic or withdrawing. To compound matters, I would get raging migraine headaches after making love during day-time hours.

Finally, as the relationship was ending, I started going to therapy and uncovered that I had been sexually abused as a child. In order for that realization to become apparent, I had to learn how to be with my anger without judging it. I needed to let go of my need to blame others for the fact that I felt angry, and instead understand where that anger was coming from—the old wounds that had set my angry responses into motion.

As I reflected on my realization, I came to understand that my recent sexual opening was triggering the abuse I had suppressed. My emotions and my headaches were both telling me something was very wrong, but it wasn’t about what I thought he should or shouldn’t have been doing, it was about the hidden emotional pain of my childhood experience.

When you sit with those uncomfortable feelings long enough, they can help you uncover difficult, but important truths.

Years later, with a new lover, we discovered more about why I would get terribly crabby. One day, while I was in the kitchen contemplating why I felt so angry inside when nothing bad had happened, he lovingly explained to me that I tended to get really rude and judgmental with him just after making love in the afternoon.

My eyes flew wide open. It was so obvious. Yes, that is the time of day I remembered being sexually abused. Then I remembered how awful it was to be abused and then go about the day as though nothing had happened.

Clearly, I had more healing work to do. Fortunately, my lover was kind enough to talk this through with me and we together we created a transition between making love during the day and attending to household activities. With his help, I healed.

Today, I don’t get angry and don’t have  headaches when I choose to make love during day-time hours. To get to that place, I needed to honor the anger and pain I was feeling. They were the outward expression of a deep and important story. Until I sat with the discomfort of my anger, it ran my life.

Running from emotions rarely helps us in the healing journey. They need to be honored, and I don’t mean by harming and hurting other people. I mean we heal by sitting down and have a “cup of tea” with our feelings so that we can understand the hidden stories behind our emotions and heal the root cause of our pain.

Reverend Misa is the author of “The Root of All Healing: 7 Steps to Healing Anything.”

How to Set Clear Healing Intentions That Work

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

fire-copyIt is your responsibility as the receiver of other people’s prayers to set the intention for prayers and energetic forms of spiritual healing that are in alignment with your own your clear desire. That means your intention needs to be very clear.

A clear intention is dependent upon how you feel spiritually strong. Are you someone that visualizes, hears or feels things easily? Do you get strong impressions that are more like knowing something?

Most of us have one or two means of spiritual perception that are strongest for us. If you visualize, you actually see something in your minds eye when someone suggests you imagine, and it is possible your dreams are very vivid.

If you are auditory, you may hear a little voice in the back of your mind or you may hear songs in your mind throughout the day.

Tactile people experience the world through impressions when you touch someone or something. You may find that you are very sensitive to being touched and love the experience of various textures.

If you are empathic, you may find yourself processing your world through your intense and ever-changing emotions.

You may simply sense or know things without consciously engaging your five senses or empathic response.

Some people experience a combination of ways in which you receive spiritual input, or you may experience it in a way I haven’t described here. I recommend you become an explorer of yourself. Discover how spiritual awareness comes to you.

As you set your intention for healing, it will help if you can see, feel, hear, sense or know exactly what healing will be for you. Then multiple times a day, you can affirm exactly the outcome that you want in a way that your spiritual self can best understand it.

For example, if your spiritual medium is visual and you have broken your leg, you will do best to visualize yourself walking. However, if you are auditory, you may want to create an inspiring affirmation or song that you can repeat to yourself throughout the day. If you are tactile, you may want to massage essential oils on to your leg above your cast and sense it becoming well. If you are sensory or empathic, you need to feel physically or emotionally what it will be like when you are walking again.

As you set your intention, also set into your heart, in the present moment, the emotional feeling you will experience when you are completely healed. Nurture this emotional feeling until it becomes part of your daily experience.

Intense emotional pleasure will super-charge your spiritual intention and prayers, giving you the boost you need to bring your intention into complete manifestation.

Receiving Healing Prayers Part II

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

candlesWhen other people’s prayers can actually limit your healing.

As we discussed in the previous article, it is important to actually open your heart to receive healing prayers from others. As you heart opens, so does your energetic body, allowing the energy, or love and intention, behind the prayer to penetrate into your being.

However, when opening your energy body, you want to be sure that the energy you are receiving is in alignment with your own intentions in order for the prayers and love to have their best effect.

What you don’t want is for them to be in conflict. For example, if someone is praying for you to be spiritually saved through your healing process, and that is not in alignment with your intentions, you may find the belief that accompanies their good wishes, causes you more harm than good as your psychic self struggles with the concept of what it means to be saved.

I’ve actually witnessed this in a healing session. Family members had said prayers for a woman’s healing that were in conflict with her spiritual perspectives. Her healing process was being slowed down because her spiritual body was in conflict around her desire to receive the loving regard of her family while rejecting the religious beliefs that were attached to those prayers.

This experience taught me that it is very important when receiving healing prayers to set the intention regarding exactly what energy and beliefs you are willing to receive.

You can most easily do this by becoming clear about your desired outcome and affirming it daily. You can simultaneously affirm that you gladly receive prayers from others that are in alignment with your clear intention, and without any limiting conditions or perspectives from them.

You can always choose to receive someone’s loving regard for you without their stated intentions or beliefs if you appreciate the love, but their intentions are incongruous with yours. After all, most prayers are intended to be acts of love for ourselves and those we care about. And love alone is powerful healing energy.

Receiving the Gifts of Prayers Part I

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

cuppedhandssmThis weekend some wonderful initiated elders came to our house for a visioning retreat where they held individuals and groups across the world in their sacred feminine arms. In that space of profound love, tremendous healing can occur for those of us open to receive.

Though the ceremony is completed, the power of the ceremony continues and the healing energy is available to all of us.

As I held space for our elders, knowing that I was being graciously included in their prayers, I reminded myself that the benefit of such loving prayers are only truly received as I open myself and willing receiving the blessing.

And so I did, by giving thanks for their prayers and opening my heart to receive their love. Once my heart was filled with profound love, I invited the love to fill my entire body, including the broken and wounded places within me.

Opening to the precious gift of loving prayers requires more than saying or thinking about receiving them.

You really have to open your energetic field and one of the best ways to get that process going is to open your heart.

Here is one of the benefits to receiving prayers based in holding you in loving energy. It allows your own higher consciousness to determine what is right and best for you. The person holding the energy for you is not directing it; simply making the love available for you to use.

I invite you to take a few moments to sit quietly today and receive the love that was held for you this weekend. Allow your heart to open and your higher consciousness to know what to do, and allow yourself to receive the healing benefits their prayers.

Holidays, Family Dynamics, and Self-Healing

Monday, December 21st, 2009

poinsettaDuring this holiday season, if you spend more time with your family, you may find your buttons getting pushed. Here is the thing about healing.

Those buttons—those are the very places where you store pent up feelings and ignore unmet core needs that lead to or contribute to illnesses. This holiday could provide a significant opportunity to do some fundamental healing that will allow your mind and body to find greater healing.

Families are where our deepest unmet needs rise to the surface. Those unmet needs unconsciously drive us, and illness, believe it or not, is one way in which we get those needs met.

When you are with family, you may find those unconscious needs becoming very apparent to you. As they do, you are in a better position to identify them and bring your hidden motivators to conscious awareness, where you can meet them in more positive ways.

I remember returning home during the holidays with the hope that my mother might actually be more interested in what I was doing or that my dad would take more notice of my opinions about things. I wanted family dynamics to be different than they were, and so holidays were often a source of great disappointment.

It took a while for me to figure out that my family was just being my family. I was changing and if I was truly growing spiritually, then I needed to be willing to hold the space for them that I was seeking for myself.

In other words, if I wanted to my mother to become more interested in me, then I needed to start a new cycle of interaction by becoming more interested in her. If I wanted my father to listen to my opinions, it meant asking more questions about his views.

Over time, my family might or might not extend the same interest in me, but regardless, I would be bringing healing into our family dynamic. Surely, if I was feeling unrecognized, unheard, or misunderstood, there was a high probability the other family members were feeling the same thing, since such unmet core needs can be (and were in my case) passed down from generation to generation.

I knew that in time, my unmet, core needs would get met—through my family members or someone else. With my family I had the opportunity to recognize the universality of those needs and simply become a healing agent within our family dynamics. I became the compassionate, healing balm we all needed.

Oh sure, I argued with myself that it should be coming from my parents first, not me. After all, they were the parents. But the reality was that I had come to understand the importance of healing core needs in order to heal physically and emotionally. My parents hadn’t come to that realization yet. So who should initiate the change? The one who knows!

In choosing to consciously become that healing agent—listening, caring, asking questions, and being concerned for another—I eventually attracted that energy into my life from friends, and to my surprise, at times from my parents and siblings.

It is amazing how much pain and tension in my body was a direct reflection of those unmet needs, and how quickly illness began healing as I created the space in which those needs could become met.

Perhaps during this holiday season, your family will be the recipient of your healing balm. Perhaps you will feel the call to be the one to bring to your family what each one of them needs most—for their healing and yours.