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
crease the risk of breast cysts and other breast problems.
The heart represents the center of joy and security, so heart
problems and high blood pressure are associated with long-standing
emotional problems and lack of joy. Therefore, the health of the
heart as a whole, and more specifically in terms of diseases relat-
ing to high blood pressure and high cholesterol, depends on your
ability to find joy in life and express that joy in terms of emotions.
Resistance and a refusal to see what is in front of you are associat-
ed with arteriosclerosis, a disease in which arteries become narrow
and hardened, making them resistant to blood flow. Squeezing all
the joy out of the heart in favor of money or position is related to
heart attacks. If we look at respiratory or lung problems through
the prism of Louise’s affirmation theory, we see that if you have
trouble breathing, you are afraid or refuse to fully take in life.
And, finally, a tendency to overmother others, put your partner’s
emotions first, and fail to nourish yourself is connected to breast
problems, including cysts, tenderness, and lumps.
So what does science tell us about the mind-body connection
between negative thoughts and behaviors and the fourth emo-
tional center? Does medical science support the theory that affir-
mations can help the health of our heart, breasts, and lungs?
Yes, it does! By transforming our anxiety, frustration, depres-
sion, and the “heartache” of lost love, we can change the health of
our heart, lungs, and breasts.1 In fact, study after study has shown
the connection between how emotions are expressed and illness
in the organs of the fourth emotional center.
Just looking at heart ailments, we can see an example of this
in the ways men and women experience heart attacks. Women, as
a whole, experience illnesses in the heart differently from men.
When having a heart attack, men tend to have a more distinc-
tive pattern of symptoms: the classical left-sided chest pain that
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radiates to the jaw and down the left arm. Not so with women.
When having a heart attack, women do not have one stereotyped
pattern of symptoms. They may have a sudden onset of digestive
distress under their rib cage accompanied by anxiety as well as a
host of other symptoms.2
Science has shown that there is a link from brain to heart, so
perhaps this difference in the expression of heart attacks between
men and women is associated with their brain wiring. With this
in mind, we can look at the styles of heart attack and see that
they mirror the way emotions are handled in the brain. Women’s
brains are structured to constantly use the information from both
fact and emotion, while men tend to try to brush emotion aside
and use mostly the logic area of the brain. Because women’s brains
tend to be more integrated, women have a much easier time put-
ting their emotions into words and thus want to engage in a dis-
cussion about difficult issues. Men have a much harder time doing
this, and as a result these emotions are likely to be shunted into
physical or physiological reactions.3 Maybe men’s explosive heart
attacks occur because emotions finally have to come out in some
way—they work their way out in a more abrupt and overt fashion.
I don’t know . . . and neither does science. But when it comes to
heart attacks, it seems that men’s hearts tend to boil while wom-
en’s hearts more or less simmer; the emotions and the heart attack
symptoms seem to relate.
There are other important connections between heart attack
and emotions that are borne out by science. For example, people
who have difficulty handling a major loss, such as the death of a
loved one, are more likely to die of heart attacks and heart disease
in the first year of their bereavement. We also often see heart at-
tacks directly following retirement or the loss of a career.4 The
feelings of hopelessness and failure that come with both of these
losses can be very powerful and affect your heart health.5 In fact,
in one study they were shown to have the same risk for causing
heart disease as smoking a pack of cigarettes a day. Not one or two
cigarettes—an entire pack!6
Other studies have linked heart disease and heart attacks with
the personality traits of people considered to be “Type A.” These
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Sweet Emotion
people tend to thrive on being aggressive and overly competitive.
To maintain this state of being, their bodies require a constant
drip of stress hormones and this drives up blood pressure and clogs
arteries.7 But we can change our thoughts and positively affect the
health of our heart. For example, one study followed a group of
men, all Type A personalities who had suffered heart attacks. The
men who were counseled on how to change their thoughts and
behavior, especially about their long-standing emotional prob-
lems connected to expressing and moving beyond their hostility
and anger, had a lower recurrence of heart problems than those
who received no counseling.8
Scientists have also found that suppressed emotions—espe-
cially anxiety, depression, and anger—play a role in creating hy-
pertension, a hardening of the blood vessels. So what’s the domino
effect that takes us from depression to hypertension? Depression
causes the brain to release norepinephrine, which stresses the ad-
renal glands. This in turn causes the adrenal glands to release too
much cortisol, which starts a cascade of inflammatory substances,
including cytokines. These cytokines cause oxygen to become
“free radicals,” which make any cholesterol in the blood harden
and cement onto the arteries, causing them to clog and making
blood pressure rise into hypertension range. So there you go. The
domino effect of depression to hypertension, emotions moving
from the brain to the heart. And it just shows that roadblocks
to emotions can cause roadblocks in the flow of blood. A simi-
lar inflammatory response is seen in people dealing with chronic
frustration.9
The connection between suppressed emotion and the health
of blood vessels has also been shown in numerous studies that
looked at a syndrome called stress cardiomyopathy, also known
as “broken-heart syndrome.” This condition can occur following
a variety of emotional stressors such as grief (for example, after
the death of a loved one), fear, extreme anger, and surprise. Stud-
ies found that patients who stuff their anger deep inside, leaving
it unexpressed, experience a higher rate of blood vessel tighten-
ing, which drives up blood pressure and reduces blood flow to the
heart.10
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In general, science supports the claim that suppressed emo-
tions, especially anxiety, depression, and anger, play a role in
blood pressure problems.11
The same connection between expressing emotions and health
is true for our lungs.12 In one study, asthma sufferers were taught
“emotional intelligence,” or mindfulness therapy, and it success-
fully improved their respiratory symptoms. The study taught them
how to name the emotion they were experiencing; indicate what
scenario precipitated it; and choose a healthy, balanced response
to soothe the emotion. This practice of acting with emotional in-
telligence decreased their tendency toward bronchial asthma at-
tacks and improved their quality of life.13
Scientific research has also shown that emotional health af-
fects the health of the breasts. Specifically, there is a relationship
between lifelong overnurturing of others, an inability to express
anger, and risk for breast cancer. In fact, women who depend on
child rearing as a source of self-esteem and a feminine identity are
at greater risk for breast cancer.14
Perhaps women with breast concerns (and I am one of them)
think they are taking care of other people by holding in their
emotions. But in reality, martyrdom really doesn’t nurture anyone
and it’s bad for your breasts. Long-term unhealthy expression of
anger, depression, and anxiety disrupts the normal levels of the
stress hormone cortisol, which may dampen the body’s immune
capacity to prevent cancer.15 One study showed that 75 percent of
the women who had breast cancer tended to be self-sacrificing and
nurtured others more than they nurtured themselves.16 And when
it comes to recovering from breast cancer, it has been shown that
receiving loving support is as important as the love and nurtur-
ance you give to others.17
So now that we understand the science behind the fourth
emotional center affirmation theory, what do we actually do to
heal these illnesses?
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Sweet Emotion
Heart Disorders
People who suffer from heart-related health problems—
whether chest pain, heart palpitations, high blood pressure, faint-
ing spells, or blocked arteries—have difficulties expressing their
emotions. They have a huge backlog of bottled-up emotions just
waiting to break out—and they do every once in a while, in wild,
passionate fits of anger or frustration or an unexplained and unex-
pected sudden retreat. The swings between emotionlessness and
fiery passion make it hard for these folks to relate to the people
around them, and they sometimes become loners rather than deal
with the anxiety that relationships bring with them.
Heart-related symptoms—even those that seem benign—can
be serious, so see a doctor if you experience any signs that your
heart health may be in trouble. But it’s also important to take a
longer-term approach to health by changing your behaviors and
thought patterns.
Listen for the messages your body is sending you about the
emotions underlying your health problems, and then work to
change your mind-set through affirmations. For example, heart
issues in general stem from long-standing emotional issues that
have hardened the heart and blocked happiness and joy. So we
need to open the heart and let joy in. A good general affirmation
to counter the negative feelings is “Joy. Joy. Joy. I lovingly allow
joy to flow through my mind and body and experience.” Harden-
ing of the arteries, or arteriosclerosis, comes from a resistant inten-
tion, hardened narrow-mindedness, and a refusal to see the good
in life. If you have these problems, help yourself with the affirma-
tion “I am completely open to life and to joy. I choose to see with
love.” Cholesterol concerns have to do with a fear of or inability to
accept happiness. To open the clogged channels of joy related to
cholesterol, you would use the affirmation “I choose to love life.
My channels of joy are wide open. It is safe to receive.” To lessen
unresolved and long-standing emotional problems that are associ-
ated with high blood pressure, use the affirmation “I joyously re-
lease the past. I am at peace.” These are a few of the most common
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heart issues. For more specific affirmations Louise recommends,
look up your specific ailment in the table on page 183.
The important work you need to do to protect your heart
health is to become more in touch with your emotions and learn
to express them in ways that will help you move through them.
Make sure to pay attention to your feelings—but don’t judge
them. Try to pinpoint what brought on the emotion. By putting
your analytical skills to the test and dissecting your feelings to
determine their origin and character, you are connecting your
problem-solving left brain to your emotional right brain. This will
help you learn to express those tricky emotions: first to yourself,
and then to the people around you. Paying attention to your emo-
tions will also help you chart your progress. If you are still having
trouble managing your feelings around other people, you might
notice a panicky or irritable feeling in certain situations. It is im-
portant to work your way into these situations slowly so you don’t
get overwhelmed and have to retreat or explode.
You may also want to work on getting in touch with your emo-
tions through practices such as meditation and journaling. There
are even sources online that give lists of feeling words. Check out
these lists and become familiar with them. Just being able to rec-
ognize and define the words that people around you are using will
help increase your emotional vocabulary.
Once you are able to express yourself, cultivating relationships
will become easier. And this is important. You must do all you
can to keep yourself from living a solitary life. Try to plan various