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The symptoms are not the dis-ease!
Discover the latest understanding of
illness and health
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Have you
ever noticed how physical health issues seem to follow predictable
patterns? Have you ever witnessed client cases similar to these …
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Cathy, a woman
with IBS (Irritable Bowel Syndrome), who experiences
constipation followed by diarrhoea on a regular basis?
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Sue, who broke
her wrist twice, and both times the new bone seemed stronger
than before?
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Sam, a baby whose
skin alternates between eczema and being cold and pale?
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Anthony, a
schoolteacher who always seems to come down with a cold
virus at
the beginning of the holidays?
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And Lisa, a
client with backache who, after her therapeutic treatments,
experiences tiredness and increased pain before getting better?
Have
you ever considered the possibility that these patterns are not
the body making a mistake - that actually, they are bio-logically
meaningful?
A cutting-edge
approach to health is now providing a scientific answer to our
long-held questions about how and why we experience illness. This
new field, META-Medicine®, gives us a scientific evidence
of the biopsychosocial (body-mind-environmental) connection,
explains how and why illnesses occur, and enables us to understand
the meaningful, two-phase process of all dis-eases – from
colds to cancers. |
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If dis-ease is a
process, what causes it to start?
Contrary to
popularly-held beliefs such as the primacy of genetics, lifestyle,
stress and other ‘risk factors’, these are not the cause of
illness in the vast majority of cases. There is no evidence of the precise moment
these ‘risk factors’ take a person from health to illness.
Meta Medicine
explains how all health issues (with the exception of poisoning,
accidents and acute malnutrition) begin with a Traumatic Life Event:
a shock that is unexpected, dramatic and causes emotional stress.
Have you ever
felt stunned, paralysed or sick to the stomach after a completely
unexpected event? Perhaps, momentarily, the world appeared to slow
down or move away from you. These are indicators of a Traumatic Life
Event (Point 2 on the Figure 1 below). Meta Medicine
explains how, in the moment of shock, a sophisticated process starts
on all levels simultaneously:
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Mind – The
unconscious mind links and records all circumstances of the
event. Have you ever noticed how smell can suddenly evoke
specific memories?
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Brain – The
brain area responsible for directing a specific organ activates.
Which area activates depends on the type of emotional stress experienced at the
moment of shock (anger, fear, loss etc)
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Organ –
Cells within the specific organ will immediately begin to
increase or decrease (depending on the brain area directing
them)
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Nervous
system – Switches into sympathetic mode, the fight-flight-freeze
response
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Social
environment – How we associate to our environment changes at the
moment of shock. Have you ever noticed someone’s behaviour
change after a traumatic event? This change is bio-logically
meaningful.
Let’s take two
of our earlier examples. IBS is caused by an indigestible chunk
shock: an experience in which someone heard/saw/felt something
that they felt angry about and couldn’t digest. Cathy got a shock
when she discovered her husband's affair, and couldn’t let go of her
anger about it. Sam’s eczema was caused by a
loss-of-contact; like many infants, he developed an epidermal
(outer skin) issue due to the shock of physical separation from his
mother. |
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So is healthy living still important?
A healthy
lifestyle keeps our vitality high and maintains the natural rhythm
between daily activity (sympathetic) and night regeneration
(parasympathetic). Pharmaceutical drugs, stimulants, lack of or
excessive exercise, stress, and nutritional, chemical and energetic
imbalances all lower our overall vitality. A low vitality makes us
more susceptible to experiencing a shock (see the dip between Points
1 and 2 on Figure 1 below).
Consider an
argumentative family member or friend. Have you ever noticed that
when you’re feeling happy and energetic, you can let go of an
argument quickly, while at other times, when your reserves are low,
a similar experience can really affect you?
Our level of
vitality is key to understanding why we react to shocks, why we get
ill when we do, and why some people seem more susceptible to illness
than others. |
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Figure 1: The Two
Phases |
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What happens after a shock?
The Traumatic
Life Event starts a stress phase (Point 3). The nervous system
remains in a mostly sympathetic state until the shock is resolved.
Typical
indications of the 1st phase include:
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Sleeplessness
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Absence of
appetite
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Compulsive
thinking about the event
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Cold body
and extremities
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Weight loss
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Tense body
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Heightened
sensitivity and easily stressed
There is a
simultaneous organ reaction. In Cathy’s case, she experiences
constipation in the 1st phase. The bio-logical meaning is
to increase the surface area of the intestinal cells, in order to
enable her to digest the indigestible chunk effectively. Sam,
on the other hand, experiences cell loss in the 1st
phase, so his skin becomes colder, drier and less sensitive. The
bio-logical meaning is to desensitise him from the loss of contact.
How do we resolve this stress?
The stress phase
continues until the individual resolves the shock, internally or
externally (Point 4). Cathy could gain resolution by making up with
or leaving her partner (an external event), or by letting go of her anger (an
internal experience). Therapies such as
EFT (Emotional Freedom
Techniques) and NLP (Neuro-Linguistic Programming) can help to
release negative emotional stress, while bodywork such as massage encourages
resolution from the physical level. For Sam, being reunited with his
mother would resolve the feeling of separation, while nutrition or
homeopathy, for example, could provide support. |
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Why do symptoms get
worse when emotionally we feel better?
At the point of
conflict resolution, we experience a switch, on all levels, to the
parasympathetic regeneration phase (Points 5 & 7). Typical
characteristics of this phase include:
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Fatigue and
tiredness
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Increased
appetite and weight gain
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Quieter mind
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Warm body
and extremities
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Activation
of microbes – bacteria, fungi and viruses
Often, what we
consider to be an illness – a stomach bug, ‘flu, muscle ache or
joint pain – is actually a 2nd phase symptom, just part
of a comprehensive dis-ease process. Anthony’s colds, Lisa’s
backache and Sue’s bone re-growth are all 2nd phase
symptoms. It is in the 2nd phase that the body
rebalances. With IBS, the body lets go of the additional cells built
up in the 1st phase, causing diarrhoea. The typical
symptoms of eczema – red, itching, sore patches of skin – occur as
the skin re-grows and re-sensitises.
Why do we experience
a healing crisis?
Half way through
the resolution phase, the healing crisis (Point 6) occurs. This is a
brief return to a sympathetic state, in which the body:
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Tests its
ability to return to normal health (Point 8)
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Squeezes the
excess water, gathered for healing, from the brain relay and
associated organ
It is during
this critical stage that heart attacks, headaches, cramps and asthma
attacks occur. In other cases, the symptoms are less extreme! Have
you ever experienced a cold, and after a couple of days, woken up
breathing clearly and thinking you were better – only to find that
your symptoms returned a few hours later? This brief period of
respite is the healing crisis. |
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How can I use the 2 phases to empower my own and my
clients’ health?
Knowing how the
body works in these two phases is incredibly powerful.
For
self-empowerment:
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Become aware
of which phase you’re in by assessing your body temperature
(particularly hands and feet), energy levels and mental activity
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Notice how
what you do mentally, physically and socially affects the 2
phases
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If you’re in
the 1st phase, ask yourself what emotional stresses you need to resolve, and which therapies can help you to do this
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If you’re in
the 2nd phase, listen (and respond!) to your body’s
need for rest and recuperation – and which therapies can assist
you to heal
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In both
phases, take in additional energy and nutrients
As a
health practitioner:
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Find out
which phase a client is in using the indicators above
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Notice where
a client is in the dis-ease cycle – this indicates what has to
happen for them to return to full health
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Be aware of
when and how your therapies are helping clients to move from a
sympathetic to a parasympathetic state
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Explain how
they may feel during the resolution phase
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Tailor your
approach and choose the most beneficial therapies for where the
client is within the dis-ease process
This mapping of
the 2 phases is just one of the 10 models of Meta Medicine,
an advanced, integrative approach to understanding health and
illness.
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If you would like
to find out more, including …
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How a dis-ease
process becomes chronic
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The
bio-logical, emotional and evolutionary cause of illnesses including heart disease, cancers, asthma, thyroid issues
and back pain
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Scientific
evidence of the biopsychosocial (organ-mind-brain-social) connection
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How to find
the root cause of your clients’ health issues
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And how this
revolutionary approach can benefit your health practice
Join a 2-Day
META-Medicine® Introductory Training
with Robert Waghmare and Joanne Ross, two of the UK’s first licensed
META-Medicine® Health Coaches and Master Trainers.
Courses take
place every other month in the West Midlands. To find out more about
this exciting new field and how to get involved, call Robert or
Joanne
on
0845 838 6787
or email
info@metamedicineuk.com
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