Tuesday, October 9, 2012

A BreakThrough Treat


I have just heard that Esther has decided to initiate the new IBA training center in Sarasota, Florida by teaching a class there for IBA staff and friends. Better still – she is teaching BreakThrough 1 – a course she wrote, but hasn’t taught for many years. Even better – she is opening it up to the public as well, until spaces are filled. I can tell you it is well worth a trip to do this course in the way that only Esther can teach it.
Below, I have added a description of the course that Esther has just written:
BreakThough is an exploration of the most common, most painful and most misunderstood human experience - conflict. As challenging as this obviously sounds, what a BreakThrough 1 class involves is really an adventure in questioning in ways we have probably not done since childhood.
Although conflict resolution certainly comes about when one works with BreakThrough, it is not our primary focus. Our focus is more far reaching. Our focus is to unlearn the habits that prevent us from seeing and feeling beyond blame. In other words, BreakThrough is all about shifts in perspective. 
When we see and feel beyond blame our experience of life’s challenges transforms, as does the way we deal with them.
One technique of BreakThrough 1 is its Seven Steps process. A single story of conflict is isolated and worked with, using a specific protocol of questioning. Step-by-step, we discover that, however recent the story is; all over-reactions have their roots in assumptions adopted in childhood. 
What is more, we discover that no matter where a person is from, or what their background is, we all bear a primal wounding that is universal. With this realization alone there bubbles up such compassion for our fellow man that conflict takes on a whole new meaning. 
Suddenly we start to understand our own behavior and our experience of others in a totally different way. Once we begin living life from this very different perspective it changes the way we deal with conflict, from the ground up. We start to be far more conscious of what we are doing and why we are doing it, and, increasingly, the concepts of blame and victim consciousness show themselves to be totally unjustified - no matter what the situation is.

Rather than urging ourselves constantly to aim for a "new and improved" self, BreakThrough gives us a tool that allows us to come home to the human being we are, and to make peace with our humanness and life in general. 
Working with BreakThrough, we have the possibility of leaving childish, needy behaviors behind and, as adults, to rediscover the ability to experience life in a truly childlike, honest and open way that is truly natural to us.
This is what BreakThrough is all about…..the healing nature of conflict.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Conscience

Conscience is the boxing ring 
in which good and bad are pitted 
against one another. 
Guilt is the biased referee
we keep on the payroll to 
mediate between our should and 
should nots and to ensure 
that all fights are fixed 
before they even begin.

Esther Veltheim 

Scientific Acceptance of Complementary Healthcare


As you are probably aware I was published in JAMR, the Journal of Alternative Medical Research earlier this year, which is a peer-reviewed journal circulated primarily in Europe. The editors and review committee I dealt with at the journal proved to be very cooperative in helping me promote the concepts of BodyTalk.
Their enthusiasm to look at alternative and complementary healthcare systems to enhance the medical model impressed me. There is now a scientific committee that has been set up with the purpose to promote awareness of complementary and integrative medicine throughout the whole healthcare system in Europe.
This committee also organizes regular conferences on a very large-scale to further this promotion. The most recent conference was the Jerusalem International Conference on integrative medicine held in Jerusalem From May 13th to 15th, 2012. It was very well attended and had dozens of presentations on all aspects of integrated medicine. I will try to keep you posted on the future conferences because we really should be trying to attend them whenever possible.
I was honored to be invited too join the scientific committee. I have listed the committee members below so that you can see the caliber of people who are involved with this project. There is exceptional diversity and wisdom among the many members of the committee. It is great that they saw fit to invite me on the committee because I was the founder of the BodyTalk System, which they are endorsing.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Chong Mai Meridian


The Chong Mai meridian is one of the eight ancestral meridians that have a very important function in traditional Chinese acupuncture as regulators of the 12 main meridians. The reason they are called ancestral meridians is that, from a Chinese medical point of view, they are the main controllers of our genetic ancestry. This is another way of saying they are the most powerful way of influencing genetic and epigenetic diseases in the body from the point of view of traditional acupuncture. 
Many colleges and courses on Chinese medicine do not address the ancestral meridians because of the lack of understanding of how they function, and a fear that treating them directly may have adverse epigenetic effects. It is true, that if addressed carelessly by the untrained practitioner using acupuncture needles, some nasty side effects can occur. However, when they are addressed using advanced BodyTalk formulas, they can give rise to incredibly powerful results without any fear of side effects. This is why I have included them in my new “Eastern Medicine” course
The main Chong Mai pathway starts in the perineum, then flows up to a point just above the pubic bone, and continues to flow bilaterally right up through the abdomen into the chest, and then up into the face. It gives out many branches to all the vital organs, and its main function is to regulate the Qi and blood in the 12 main meridians and their corresponding organs. 
Its upward energy flow helps to maintain the position of the organs. Any weakness in the Chong Mai will lead to prolapse. (The Spleen meridian also shares this function of maintaining bodily structures in place and preventing prolapse.) It also strengthens everything in its pathway by filling the organs and tissues with healthy Qi and blood. It also fills the breasts. [Diminished breast size where tone has been lost, relates to functional disturbance of the Chong Mai and Spleen meridians.) 
During pregnancy, it plays a very large role in nurturing the fetus. If the mother’s vitality is low, or she’s not eating well and under too much stress, there will be a tendency to drain the reserves of the Chong Mai in order to assure a healthy baby. After the birth, the weak Chong Mai will result in poor circulation of blood and Qi to the body. There may also be diminished breast milk as the Chong Mai is very involved with producing the milk. Depression, and general tiredness develop quite quickly.

If the Chong Mai is not replenished, then once the mother stops breast-feeding, the breasts will tend to diminish in size and tone, and will end up smaller than they were before the pregnancy. Another cause of this pathological scenario is when the mother has an episiotomy or cesarean birth. If the scars do not heal well, they will block the flow of the Chong Mai. The BodyTalk or acupuncture scar treatment techniques are invaluable in this case. 
Interesting observation: Clinical experience has shown how transverse scars of the abdomen can have a powerful influence on the meridians flowing through the area; particularly the Chong Mai. It is quite common for a woman to undergo a hysterectomy and find that over the next year she becomes unusually tired, and feels her body is deteriorating. She’s prone to constipation, poor digestion, weak lungs, sagging breasts, and loss of tone in the facial muscles and skin. When she tells her medical doctor about this happening since the hysterectomy, he reassures her that he only took out her uterus, and that cannot affect the body in the way she describes! 
The reality is that the hysterectomy scars (internal and external) can effectively block most the flow of the Chong Mai, which would give rise to all those symptoms. Addressing the scar tissue will not necessarily correct the problem; the Chong Mai will also need to be addressed specifically. During my many years of practice I have literally seen dramatic regeneration of the body in hundreds of cases. I have also seen numerous cases of women who have diminished breast size and tone since the pregnancy, have that size and turn replenished even 10 years after having their last child. 
In modern times, where there is continuing stress exhaustion, it is often the Chong Mai meridian that suffers the most. The Chong Mai works at its best when the body has abundant energy and is stress-free. In a sense it is considered the energy system indicative of good health because when the Chong Mai is “full” the whole abdominal cavity is filled with nurturing energy, the organs are vital, the breasts are full, the lungs are strong, and the face is wrinkle free.
Another indicator is the strength of the relationship between blood and Qi. This can clearly be seen in the menstrual cycle of women. When the blood is weak, the menstrual flow is scanty or nonexistent. When Qi is weak, there is often very heavy menstrual flow, or even flooding.
When the Chong Mai is not filling the heart, there is a strong tendency to emotional heart pain, depression, and a general inability to experience joy in life. This will also give rise to a tendency to want to over-protect the heart in relationships, leading to an inability to fully express oneself, particularly in aspects of love and acceptance.
Filling the lungs with adequate Qi and blood is obviously a very important function. Weakness in this area makes the lungs vulnerable to infection, certain types of asthma, and respiratory disorders.
The Chong Mai doesn’t have specific effects on individual aspects of the digestion however, it will create a general weakness in digestive function and inhibit the whole process of the breakdown and absorption of food.
On top of all that, this very important ancestral Meridian can be used to address epigenetic disorders related to all those functions mentioned above. Up to this point, no course offered by the IBA, (including the Chinese Medicine course offered until it was discontinued at the end of last year), has addressed the ancestral meridians because we did not have an appropriate treatment protocol for addressing them. Now an excellent treatment protocol has been developed and proven. The details of the protocol will be a very important part of this section of the new “Eastern Medicine” course offered early in 2012.

The Mind

Like a hammer that bangs 
to drown out the noise it makes, 
The mind numbs me with logic 
and philosophy. 
When will it tire of all this? 
Words, words, words. 
The mind seeks to describe You, 
and in so doing misses 
the point it sought to make. 
The voice of the heart 
is tried and convicted, 
Guilty of longing and 
sentenced to silence. 
The judge and jury 
continue to rant and rave. 
Oh mind, when will I 
tire of all this? 

Esther Veltheim

Understanding

“If you can’t explain it to a six year old, you don’t understand it yourself.” 

Albert Einstein