Nourishing Body, Mind and Spirit

Posts tagged ‘Dr. Klinghardt’

Energy healing

I haven’t really spent a lot of time talking about the importance of energy healing for sensitive children.

The truth is that I’ve found it easier to talk about dietary changes, supplements and homeopathy because it’s less personal to do so. It’s more difficult to discuss subjects like angels and spirit guides. Plus the fact that my spiritual teachers often suggest keeping information that we receive during sacred journeys, well, sacred…  To not speak of them because to speak of them can “diffuse” the energy (and the power) of the experience.

Nonetheless, I want to start speaking of about these topics because I feel that a large part of my life purpose is my work as energy healer. One that specializes in helping families of sensitive children. Makes sense, doesn’t it?

I feel that energy healing is an important healing modality that can really help sensitive children. In addition to, and as a complement to, homeopathy, supplements and dietary changes.

I’ve mentioned this before, but to recap, according to Dr. Klinghardt’s article regarding the five levels of healing:

  • dietary changes, supplements and medicines work on the first level (i.e., physical level) of healing;
  • yoga, acupuncture and acupressure work on the second level (i.e., emotional level) of healing;
  • homeopathy falls into the third level of healing (i.e., mental level– my Heilkunstler might categorize Heilkunst homeopathy on the fourth level);
  • energy healing (including shamanism, Reiki, IET, family constellation work, past life work) is included in the fourth level of healing (i.e., intuitive level); and
  • finally, the fifth level of healing is the own healing that we do (i.e., through prayer, meditation, shamanic journeying on our own behalf).

If you are a regular reader of my blog, you know that I have actively pursued all five levels of healing for my sensitive son, as well as for myself. Dr. Klinghardt noted that that healing impulses created on a higher level can penetrate downward, but not upwards. Therefore, the higher the level of healing you pursue, can have profound effects on the lower levels. For example, prayer can have profound effects on physical healing. Conversely, taking a supplement may help the physical body (if there is a physical imbalance related to that supplement), but won’t heal your spiritual body. You can read more about our five energetic bodies here.

Letting it all go

Now that we’ve grieved, done all of the reading and intellectually know all there is to know about Job’s Syndrome, and came up with a game plan, ironically, the next step that is important in this journey is to let it all go. In Dr. Klinghardt’s paper, The 5 Levels of Healing, an important part of the healing process is to disconnect from the diagnosis. Do not be defined and limited by it.

If we have a diagnosed illness, the diagnosis acts like a curse: we start to think, act and feel as if we were those other people that have suffered this illness, whose family and loved ones suffered in certain ways, as if we were those that died. In medicine, this is called the “nocebo” effect. It is most important to disconnect a sick patient from the mental consensus field of his/her illness.

Fortunately, in my son’s case, right now he is too young to be feel any mental restrictions related to the diagnosis.

When we were in Halifax, he asked me why were at the hospital. He asked me, “Am I sick?” because he didn’t understand why we were there given that he wasn’t sick. I told him that he wasn’t sick, but that the doctors were wondering why he used to get sick in the past. And that’s the truth, he was sick in the past, but in the present, he is doing so well.

During these last 5 weeks, my husband and I haven’t been well. We’ve been sad, sick in the heart, depressed. One night, the night that our son developed a new gum abscess and we were feeling particularly down, my son asked my husband, “What’s wrong, Daddy, are you sick?” Then he got up, walked over to my husband, gave him a hug and a kiss, and said, “I’m sorry that you’re not feeling well today, Daddy. This kiss will make you feel better.” And it did.

Hopefully as my son grows up, our (mine and my husband’s) mindset about it will have healed enough so that we won’t impart on him feelings of limitations regarding the diagnosis.

All that we really want for our son is for him to be free to be himself. Moses. Not Moses with a diagnosis, but just Moses. We want our son to be free to be himself. Just like the day that he told me when he was almost 3 years old.  “I am just me.”  Perfect as he is, just him being him.

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