Read All Is Well: Heal Your Body With Medicine, Affirmations, and Intuition Online
Authors: Louise L. Hay,Mona Lisa Schulz
Tags: #General, #Body; Mind & Spirit, #Inspiration & Personal Growth, #Self-Help, #Personal Growth
as much power to do so as the next person. You just have to take
hold of it and make it work.
From the Clinic Files: Addiction Case Study
Jenny, now 49 years old, was always sensitive and nervous.
When she was a child, her father was a businessman and traveled
frequently for work. Jenny often felt lonely. She turned to food,
which became her faithful companion. Jenny’s other passion was
to be a ballet dancer, but when she applied to ballet school she was
told she was too heavy for a serious career in ballet. Although she
continued to dance, she struggled with her weight and was often
injured. After a particularly bad knee injury, Jenny’s doctor pre-
scribed Oxycodone for the pain and Xanax for the related anxiety.
However, even after her injury had healed, she continued using
the Xanax and Oxycodone and other prescription medicines to
manage her anxiety and fears. Finally Jenny quit ballet altogether.
Jenny eventually got married and life was better; she felt hap-
pier and was able to wean herself off the drugs. But after her sec-
ond child was born, her depression and anxiety returned, and
once again she turned to prescription drugs to deal with her stress.
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A New Attitude
Jenny soon developed symptoms that different practitioners diag-
nosed as various illnesses ranging from chronic fatigue to irritable
bowel syndrome to attention deficit disorder—all of which led
Jenny to medicate these new problems with medicine, at escalat-
ing dosages. At this point, one physician, recognizing a problem,
refused to write her prescriptions and told her she had to deal
with her addiction problem.
Addictions to drugs, food, sex, gambling, rescuing, or, in Jen-
ny’s case, prescription medicines are used to cover up emotions
we can’t handle, whether they’re sadness, anxiety, anger, lost love,
boredom, or low self-esteem—the list is endless. Addictions also
block intuitive messages that we don’t want to hear. The substances
fill a spiritual void, a “nameless emptiness” that we don’t even
know exists.
But addiction isn’t simple use of substances. It’s a dominant
use that has led to problems with work, school, home, or other
relationships. Addiction causes us to be late, absent, or fired as
we neglect our responsibilities to everyone, including ourselves.
Sometimes addiction can escalate to the degree that it becomes
physically hazardous, resulting in accidents or worse. But we can’t
stop the compulsive behavior despite its adverse consequences.
Jenny took Oxycodone and Xanax to get to sleep, to be free
from anxiety, and to handle the chronic pain from old ballet in-
juries in her feet and spine. So the first thing we did was try to
identify whether any of her “new illnesses”—the fatigue, bowel
complaints, and attention deficit disorder—could stem from this
drug use.
Oxycodone side effects include drowsiness, fatigue, impaired
attention and memory, and constipation, among others. Xanax
and other “benzodiazepines” cause problems with attention and
memory as well. When I suggested to Jenny that the very drugs
she was taking for sleep, anxiety, and pain could be causing all of
these new health problems, she told me it was worth it. She didn’t
feel that she could handle the pain without the Oxycodone, and
she got very defensive about it, asking me why I didn’t “get it.”
After she calmed down, she told me she was at a crisis point in her
life. She had already lost her driver’s license for driving impaired,
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A ll i s w e ll
and her husband had threatened divorce because her use of drugs
had so affected their marriage and family life.
I told Jenny that she was not alone and there was nothing to be
ashamed of, since problems with opiate addiction were escalating
across the world. Morphine, codeine, Dilaudid, Demerol, heroin,
and Oxycodone are all opiates that affect the “opioid” receptor,
the same brain/body receptor for mood, self-esteem, spiritual ful-
fillment, pain, and sleep. If you use these medicines, whether they
are prescribed by a physician or you get them “off the street,” you
quickly build up a tolerance, meaning that you need more and
more of the medicine to feel the desired effect. Xanax, Ativan,
Valium, and Klonopin hit a different receptor—the GABA recep-
tor. This is the same one that is affected by alcohol. The power of
these drugs is so intense that you can’t just stop, as sudden with-
drawal can cause seizures and death.
I told Jenny that she needed support to get off Oxycodone and
Xanax. In addition to going into rehab to help her body slowly
wean itself off the drugs, she would learn new skills to manage her
anxiety, sleep, and old athletic injuries.
Although she had a lot of reservations, after a month Jenny
went into a drug addiction recovery unit that helped treat her
addictions to the prescription drugs. The physicians very slowly
weaned her off the drugs she had been taking, and then she re-
ceived the nonaddictive drug clonidine to treat her racing heart.
In team meetings with her husband, she was offered a variety of
drug maintenance programs to help prevent her from going back
to Oxycodone when she was discharged.
A pain treatment team evaluated her spine and feet and di-
agnosed her with arthritis from her ballet years. To address this,
Jenny decided to go aggressive with high doses of vitamin C,
grape seed extract, and glucosamine sulfate. These supplements,
along with weekly yoga, acupuncture, and Yamuna body rolling
treatments, helped her tap into her natural healing powers. If
things got too bad, she could always use methadone, levometh-
adyl (LAAM), naltrexone, or buprenorphine but only under the
strict supervision of her treatment team.
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A New Attitude
In the rehab unit, Jenny took part in a therapy program called
dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), which is tailored for people
with substance abuse problems. DBT is a form of mindfulness
training that helped Jenny learn how to regulate her anxiety. She
worked with a psychiatrist who was skilled in the science of com-
bining pharmaceutical medicine with complementary medicines.
So along with passionflower, lemon balm, and 5HTP, Jenny was
prescribed Zoloft and Remeron.
Finally, Jenny was required to create a strong long-term plan
with a vocational counselor and coach. She began to see that
much of her drug use, pain, anxiety, and insomnia came from
a lack of direction after her ballet career was cut short. Her voca-
tional counselor helped her identify some alternatives that would
allow her to continue being involved in what she loves, including
the possibility of starting a dance school for children.
In addition to the help Jenny got in learning about herself and
cementing her self-confidence, she worked on her own to address
the emotions that were contributing to her addiction. She used
affirmations for anxiety (I love and approve of myself and I trust
the process of life. I am safe); depression (I now go beyond other
people’s fears and limitations. I create my life); panic (I am capable
and strong. I can handle all situations in my life. I know what to
do. I am safe and free); and addiction (I now discover how wonder-
ful I am. I choose to love and enjoy myself).
Bringing all these treatments together to create a strong, in-
tegrated plan helped Jenny find herself. She was able to face the
uncertainty and pain in her life and heal her addiction.
All Is Well in the Third Emotional Center
The third emotional center encompasses a broad spectrum
of health problems, including mild or serious digestive disorders,
blood sugar issues, and weight and addiction troubles. But at the
heart of all of these is a lack of self-esteem and an inability to bal-
ance inner needs with outer responsibilities. When you feel good
and you have a healthy sense of self-esteem, you can create lasting
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health in the third emotional center. Look to the messages your
body is sending you about how healthy you are emotionally and
physically. Identify the stressors that contribute to your imbal-
ance. Your body will tell you if you listen and heed its warnings.
Once you change the negative thought patterns and behaviors
that stand in your way and learn to define yourself not by fam-
ily, work, or what you do for others but by who you are, you will
find health. Know your weaknesses but do not dwell on them or
run from them. Feed your self-worth and realize that you have
innate goodness. Resist any negative thoughts about who you are
with the assertion “I am good enough. I don’t have to overwork to
prove my worth.”
Love yourself and all will be well.
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The Fourth Emotional Center:
Heart, Lungs, and Breasts
The fourth emotional center is about balancing your needs
and the needs of someone else with whom you’re in a relationship.
If you aren’t able to do this, your body will let you know by creat-
ing health problems related to your heart, breasts, or lungs, such
as high cholesterol, high blood pressure, heart attack, cysts, masti-
tis or even cancer, pneumonia, asthma, coughing, or shortness of
breath. The secret to mastering health in your fourth emotional
center is learning how to express your own needs and emotions
while also taking into consideration the needs and emotions of
others. It’s a matter of give and take.
Just as with the other emotional centers, the part of your body
that is affected will depend on what behavior or negative thought
pattern is causing the imbalance in how you deal with emotions
in a relationship. Those who are not in touch with their emotions
tend toward heart problems; people who are overwhelmed by their
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emotions often experience lung issues; and people who express
only the positive side of their emotions develop breast problems.
We will get more specific later when we address each body part.
However, generally speaking, the negative thoughts and behaviors
that are associated with fourth emotional center health tend to
come from anxiety, irritability, depression, and long-term emo-
tional problems. People who have fourth emotional center health
problems fear life and don’t feel worthy of living a good life—they
have an apparent lack of joy. They also tend to overmother and
put others’ emotions before their own.
If you have heart, breast, or lung issues, your body is telling
you that you need to examine how you maintain your own emo-
tional health while nurturing the emotional health of a relation-
ship. The signs may not be as severe as a heart attack or breast
cancer; they may be as subtle as breast tenderness, slightly elevated
blood pressure, or lung tightness.
Taking note of these slight changes in your health is the first
step. As always, seek medical help for any serious health problems,
but also make sure to look at the emotional aspects of these health
problems. Your goal is to transform your behaviors and thoughts
so you can find a comfortable balance between the effort you ex-
pend to help others and how much energy you invest in yourself.
Fourth Emotional Center Affirmation Theory and Science
Louise’s affirmation theory explores the subtle emotional dif-
ferences behind the health of fourth emotional center organs.
Health in these areas depends upon your ability to fully express
all emotions and to develop the capacity to experience anger,
disappointment, and anxiety—the so-called negative emotions—
without becoming overwhelmed by them. Only then is it possible
to truly move through anger, find a way to forgive, love, and ex-
perience joy again. Knowing, feeling, and expressing all of your
emotions, whether love and joy, fear and anger, is good for your
health. These emotions keep you moving steadily through life
and, as Louise says, this helps keep your blood flowing through
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Sweet Emotion
your heart and blood vessels. In fact, the word “emotion” comes
from the Latin word meaning “to move.”
The ultimate goal is to use affirmations to transform nega-
tive thoughts and behaviors into positive ones and actually effect
physical change, such as lowering blood pressure and cholesterol,
easing asthma symptoms, or balancing hormone levels that in-