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
with your emotions—to tune in to them in a new way. Practices
such as meditation can teach you to calm your mind. They can
help you create a more stable relationship with your feelings. They
can also help rewire your brain so you learn to control your emo-
tions and not react so extremely to their presence.
Another practice that can help in regulating the effects of
your dramatic emotions is to create a time-out structure. Look
at your past emotional outbursts and try to determine why they
happened. What triggered them? How did you feel leading up to
them? What was the tipping point? If you are able to identify your
triggers and your body’s reaction to them, you will learn to rec-
ognize an emotional takeover in the moment—and not let it hap-
pen. This won’t come naturally at first, but it will come. Once you
recognize the signals of overwhelm occurring in your body, you
will be able to react in a more constructive way. You will be able to
take a time-out—whether this means physically leaving a heated
situation or simply stepping away mentally to let your emotions
become a little less intense. As you make mindfulness and positive
thought patterns a part of your daily routine, you will find that
you have to step away from your emotions less frequently.
These actions and affirmations will help you move toward
a more emotionally balanced life. If you want to have healthy
lungs, you need to learn to express your feelings in a calmer, more
controlled way. It’s possible to be calm, controlled, and in charge
and still be exciting and emotional—the life of the party. Learn
to balance your emotions with the needs of the important part-
ners in your life, and watch your health in the fourth emotional
center improve.
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From the Clinic Files: Lung Disorders Case Study
My client Mary, 60 years old, describes herself as a “tornado
of human emotion.” She has always been thin-skinned, and her
mood shifts depending on her relationship status, how much
money is in her bank account, and even the weather. Mary says
that she can be laughing one minute and crying the next.
Passionate at her best, and emotionally volatile at worst, Mary
never does anything halfway, and that includes how deeply she
feels each and every emotion. Mary’s mood swings are exhausting
for her friends, who never know what to expect from her behav-
ior—there always seems to be a new drama. Mary started therapy
to find out why she had so little control over her emotions. She
was diagnosed with bipolar II (a less manic form of bipolar disor-
der) by one therapist, and borderline personality disorder by an-
other. Neither the diagnostic labels nor their treatments were able
to help Mary maintain stable relationships or keep a job.
Mary had suffered from asthma since puberty and noticed
that her moods got worse when she had to take steroids to treat
the most severe episodes of respiratory distress. By her late teens,
even though she knew it was bad for her lungs, Mary took up
smoking because it seemed to be the only thing that helped calm
her mood swings. After one particularly tough breakup, she began
smoking more than usual. One evening, she couldn’t stop cough-
ing and ended up in the emergency room. The doctor who treated
her warned her to quit smoking: she was in the beginning stages
of emphysema, or a lung disease called COPD (chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease).
Mary had two medical problems, her mood and her lungs, and
she had to address her moodiness in order to create pulmonary
health. So that’s where we began.
Mary wanted to know the name for her mood problem. Was it
major depression? Was it bipolar II? Was it borderline personality
disorder? Modern psychiatry has done much to ease our emotional
suffering but unlike other medical specialties, it does not utilize
blood tests, CT scans, MRIs, or other objective tests to give a person
a definitive diagnosis. Instead, a psychiatrist, psychologist, nurse
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practitioner, or other caregiver will look at the symptoms and
signs the client has and try to match these patterns with a condi-
tion listed in the
DSM-V,
the guidebook for psychiatric diagnosis.
So there are no laboratory data to support or disprove a diagnosis.
That said, since Mary received three different diagnoses from
three different psychiatric professionals, what was important for
her was getting her mood treated adequately.
Mary finally committed to treatment with a psychiatric team
that supported this focus and deemphasized her diagnostic label.
Their main concern was to put together a plan with clear treat-
ment goals. With the help of her counselor, Mary made a list of
her emotional symptoms. Here’s what she found:
• She had unstable moods every day.
• Her moods varied depending on what was going on
around her, whether it was a “bad hair day,” heavy
traffic, or a crabby boss (called affective instability).
• She had problems with overeating, oversleeping,
fatigue, low self-esteem, concentration, and
hopelessness (called mild depression, or dysthymia).
• She experienced impulsive moments, including
episodes of “road rage” and a couple of times when
she became enraged and punched her spouse.
• She found that most antidepressant drugs have no
effect on her symptoms.
• She experienced moments when after someone
abruptly left, she felt like killing herself but the bad
feelings quickly passed (transient suicidal thoughts).
Mary’s treatment team quickly got her engaged in an emotional
skills training class called dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT).
Based in Tibetan Buddhism and mindfulness, DBT helped Mary
learn techniques to stabilize her moods and regulate her daily ac-
tivities so she was less prone to overeat and oversleep. She also
learned to transform her rage and handle her transient suicidal
thoughts through crisis chain analysis. In this process, she learned
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to break up a seemingly overwhelming crisis into understandable
parts, identify the emotions associated with each part, and soothe
herself through each step. She took weekly two-hour classes and a
one-hour, one-on-one coaching session to introduce her to these
very powerful methods.
To go along with her emotional skills training, a psychiatrist
prescribed minimal amounts of medication that could help her
stabilize her moods. Mary took Topamax, a mood stabilizer, and
the antidepressant Wellbutrin XL, which helped her fatigue and
concentration problems as well.
Next we turned to Mary’s lung problems.
In asthma, the trachea and bronchial areas become very “irritable”
for a number of reasons—allergies, side effects of medicines, mood,
anxiety, and of course, cigarette smoke. When Mary’s wheezing, short-
ness of breath, and coughing started to affect her, she learned (like ev-
eryone else) to pull out the classic inhaler with the stimulant Albuterol
or Ventolin. A puff for relief. When that temporary relief didn’t last,
doctors upped the ante with an inhaler that has both the stimulant
and a steroid that puts out the allergy/autoimmune fire underlying the
asthmatic response. Mary tried a number of these enhanced inhal-
ers—Advair, Pulmicort, and Flovent—but at times even these weren’t
enough.
By her bedside, Mary had a longer-acting inhalerlike device
called a nebulizer that drove the medicine deeper into her respira-
tory tree. During particularly difficult times, Mary took oral ste-
roids to put out the allergic fire in her body, but as she learned soon
enough, these medicines have side effects, including moodiness,
irritability, osteoporosis, and weight gain. Soon Mary began talk-
ing leukotriene inhibitors such as Singulair to help her asthma by
knocking out yet another part of her immune system. Although
these medicines all have side effects, they helped save her life be-
cause, at that time, she had no other options.
However, when Mary used mindfulness and affirmations in
addition to her medicine, she was able to calm her anxiety and stop
smoking, which greatly alleviated her asthma and lung problems.
Mary continued monthly—and then yearly—checkups with
her pulmonologist. She also visited an acupuncturist and Chinese
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herbalist who helped her regulate her breathing problem with
a variety of herbal blends, including respiryn extract, Crocody
Smooth Tea Pills, Andrographis, and Bronchial Care remedy.
Even after Mary’s official DBT classes ended, she kept up her
mindfulness practice. She also used the affirmations for general
lung health (I take in life in perfect balance); lung problems (I
have the capacity to take in the fullness of life. I lovingly live life
to the fullest); emphysema (It is my birthright to live fully and
freely. I love life. I love me); respiratory ailments (I am safe. I love
my life); COPD (I have the capacity to take in the fullness of life.
I lovingly live life to the fullest); and breathing problems (It is my
birthright to live fully and freely. I am worth loving. I now choose
to live life fully) to help herself fully heal.
Mary changed her lifestyle, addressed her anxiety, and faced
her negative beliefs to create a life without the pain of respiratory
problems
Breast Problems
Women—and men—who have breast issues such as cysts,
lumps, soreness (mastitis), even cancer, nurture and mother oth-
ers often to the point of being overbearing. These people are much
more comfortable solving other people’s problems and comforting
others’ pain than handling their own. They hide their own emo-
tions so they can keep stable relationships at all costs. In extreme
cases, they’ll never bitch, never moan, never complain. They are
seemingly happy at all times.
If you are a nurturer by nature, it is hard for you not to take
care of people in need. We’re not saying you should give up being
who you are—a loving, caring, involved human being. But you
do need to examine why you are a compulsive nurturer of others
and worry so little about yourself. You might also examine
how
you nurture and find slightly less imposing ways of caring for the
people you love. So what is the prescription to bring a little more
balance to your life?
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As always, if you have an acute concern such as a lump or
pain in the breast—especially if you have a close relative who has
had breast cancer—see a doctor immediately. But you must also
focus on your long-term breast health, which means changing the
thought patterns and behaviors that are stressing your body.
Let’s jump straight into Louise’s affirmation system. Breasts
have to do with mothering and nourishment. But nourishment
has to go both ways—in as well as out. A good general affirma-
tion to remind you to strive for equilibrium in this area would be
“I take in and give out nourishment in perfect balance.” Specifi-
cally, breast problems have to do with a refusal to mother yourself
because you are putting everyone else first. To counter this imbal-
ance in the way you nurture, try repeating the affirmation “I am
important. I count. I now care and nourish myself with love and
with joy. I allow others the freedom to be who they are. We are all
safe and free.”
Part of achieving balance in the fourth emotional center is
giving voice to those thoughts that have been lingering beneath
the surface. You may have no problem facing the emotional highs
and lows of another person, but you can’t address your own nega-
tive emotions such as fear, sadness, disappointment, depression,
anger, or despair. So how do you learn to express these emotions?
The key is to start slowly. Now that you know that voicing your
emotions—good and bad—can be lifesaving, you can start to
break through your wall of emotional stoicism, starting right this
moment. And the best way into this is twofold: assess your own
feeling about people in your life who show their less happy selves
from time to time, and find yourself an emotional midwife.
The first of these steps is a hard realization for a lot of peo-
ple. Assessing your feelings about others will help you get a bet-
ter grasp on the reality of relationships. Your always being happy
isn’t the reason that people like you. They like you because you
are you. And they accept that you are human. When your friends
are experiencing disappointment, you want to help them. They