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
likely want to do the same thing for you. And when they get
upset, you tolerate and even understand their outbursts. Is it really
wrong to assume that they will reciprocate when you show anger
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or frustration? Your friends will not discard you for not always
being chipper. In fact, opening up and expressing your full range
of emotions will help make your relationships deeper and more
solid.
As for the emotional midwife, what we mean by this is to find
someone—a friend, a therapist—who will provide you with a safe
haven as you learn how to express negativity. Let them know that
this is something you’re working on, and ask for their help. Ask
them to hold you accountable. If you can learn to speak about
your sadness, anger, and disappointments in this environment,
you will become much more comfortable using this language in
the greater world.
And just remember: expressing negative emotions doesn’t
mean that you are nurturing a negative attitude. You aren’t going
to turn into a whiny old fuddy-duddy if you discuss legitimate
complaints with those around you.
So work to incorporate this healthy affirmation into your life:
“I express all of my emotions openly, willingly, and skillfully.”
Give your emotions a voice, and experience better health in the
fourth emotional center.
From the Clinic Files: Breast Problems Case Study
Nina was a 33-year-old woman who was a mother to everyone
who needed one. She could always be counted on to whip up a
full meal for unexpected visitors or bake a delicious dessert when
a friend was going through a rough time. She didn’t just mother
those closest to her. She volunteered her time helping the poor,
counseling children and women in need, and teaching English
to recent immigrants. Nina was upbeat and positive, even when
faced with grim or dispiriting situations.
Long before the days of social media, Nina managed to stay
in touch with friends from all phases of her life. In addition, Nina
was married and had four children. People marveled at how she
was able to juggle all the aspects of her life with little apparent
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Sweet Emotion
effort. Then during a routine physical, Nina’s doctor found a lump
in her breast and diagnosed it as benign fibrocystic breast disease.
Fibrocystic breast disease is not breast cancer. In this condition
certain areas in the breast have denser connective tissue. Many
people think it’s not a disease at all, but even with this consider-
ation, it got Nina worried. Her mother had died of breast cancer,
and she wanted us to help her create healthier breasts.
The first thing we did was refer her to our great friend and col-
league Christiane Northrup’s book
Women’s Bodies, Women’s Wisdom
because it has a whole section on how to create breast health. How-
ever, we also wanted to give her a program that was unique to her.
The first thing we discussed was her tendency to mother ev-
eryone around her. The lump in her breast was a sign that her
life was out of balance. Her intuitive body was telling her that it
was time for her to stop overcommitting herself to everyone and
everything. Nina’s lifestyle often led to adrenal gland stress and
an imbalance in hormones that leans toward estrogen domi-
nance. This hormonal state promotes cell overgrowth—including
cancer cells.
Nina also needed to structure her diet in a way that would cre-
ate the least estrogen possible. She had to minimize the amount
of animal fat she ate since this may be connected to the body’s
ability to produce more estrogen. She moved to a high-fiber diet
to help her body excrete estrogen through bowel movements. And
she ate a great deal more broccoli, Brussels sprouts, and dark leafy
greens, which, via Indole-3-Carbinol, change how your body me-
tabolizes estrogen.
Her diet also needed to focus on losing excess fat, so in addition
to the estrogen-focused eating changes, we instructed her to eat
healthy protein (such as seafood, chicken, and low-fat dairy prod-
ucts) at every meal. She was also to set up an eating pattern that
included a large breakfast and lunch and a tiny, carbohydrate-free
dinner. And we limited her alcohol intake to one drink per day.
In further efforts toward weight loss, we helped her identify
some aerobic activities that she could take part in for 30 minutes a
day five to six times a week. She decided to alternate the elliptical
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machine and stationary bike at the gym with walks around the
lake near her home.
We recommended that she take the antioxidants selenium
and coenzyme Q10 to promote healthy cell function that would
help prevent breast cancer.
Nina also needed to aggressively treat her depression and learn
how to express the negative feelings she had. She started jour-
naling and enlisted the help of a therapist to work through her
grief. She also asked her best friend to be an additional emotional
midwife.
To correct the imbalance in how Nina nurtured herself and
others, she used the affirmations for breast health (I take in and
give out nourishment in perfect balance); breast problems (I am
important. I count. I now care for and nourish myself with love
and with joy. I allow others the freedom to be who they are. We
are all safe and free); and depression (I now go beyond other peo-
ple’s fears and limitations. I create my life).
After changing her lifestyle and thoughts, Nina managed to
drop 20 pounds and is on the path of caring for herself and oth-
ers while expressing all of her emotions—not just the happy ones.
All Is Well in the Fourth Emotional Center
When it comes to creating healthier hearts, breasts, and lungs,
recognize that man (and woman) cannot depend upon medicine
or nutritional and herbal supplements alone. Of course, it is im-
portant that you address acute health problems medically and
under the supervision of a doctor. But for more long-term health
in the area of the fourth emotional center, we recommend that
you turn your attention to how well you balance your own needs
with those of the other people in your life.
You are emotionally strong. All is well.
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The Fifth Emotional Center:
Mouth, Neck, and Thyroid
The health of the fifth emotional center indicates how well
you communicate in your life. If you struggle to communicate—
whether the difficulty is not listening to others or not express-
ing yourself effectively—you likely have health issues in the areas
of the mouth, neck, and thyroid. The key to health in the fifth
emotional center is finding a balance in how you communicate in
your day-to-day interactions.
Remember, communication is a two-way street. Listening and
talking both need to happen. Effective communication is about
hearing and being heard. You have to be able to get your point
across while also taking in the knowledge and opinions of others
so you can alter your actions accordingly.
The area of your body that is affected by poor communica-
tion skills depends on the thought patterns and behaviors that
create the problem. There are three communication problems
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that often lead to illness in this emotional center. Problems in
the mouth—including the teeth, jaw, and gums—are often found
in people who have a hard time expressing and dealing with per-
sonal disappointments. Problems of the neck are often found in
people who—even if they have flawless communication skills on
a regular basis—become inflexible and frustrated when they are
unable to control the outcome of a situation. And finally, people
with thyroid problems are frequently very intuitive but are unable
to voice what they see because they too often struggle to keep
the peace or win people’s approval. We will discuss the specifics
of each tendency as we work through the body parts later in this
chapter. Just keep this in mind: if you have thyroid, jaw, neck,
throat, and mouth problems, your body is telling you to examine
your communication skills.
Fifth Emotional Center Affirmation Theory and Science
According to Louise Hay’s affirmation theory, the health of
the neck, jaw, thyroid, and mouth depends on having a voice.
Specifically, throat problems have to do with an inability to speak
up and a feeling that creativity is being stifled, while a peritonsil-
lar abscess (an infection of the throat that grows near the tonsils)
is related to a strong belief that you can’t speak up for yourself or
ask for what you need. Having a “lump in the throat” is associated
with fear of expressing yourself.
Moving down to the neck, problems with the cervical spine
have to do with being set in your opinion and having a closed
mind. Refusing to see another’s point of view can also set the
scene for stiff neck and other cervical spine problems.
According to affirmation theory, thyroid disorders tend to
occur when people are humiliated and don’t get to do what they
want to do. Not being able to assert your will can make you sus-
ceptible to hypothyroidism. People who feel “hopelessly stifled”
have an increased risk for suffering from this disorder.
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Something to Talk About
What does medical science have to say when it comes to the
mind-body connection underlying fifth emotional center disor-
ders such as neck, thyroid, and mouth problems?
The thyroid, one of the body’s largest endocrine glands, is
exquisitely reactive to all your hormones—and it’s drastically af-
fected by your ability to communicate.1
Women are much more likely to have thyroid problems than
men—especially after menopause.2 Studies done to figure out
why often point to the difference in biology between the genders.
Since thyroid problems often first kick in around puberty—when
our bodies are flooded with new levels of testosterone, estrogen,
and progesterone—and again when hormones in women’s bodies
are at their lowest around menopause, scientists have posited that
difference in hormones correlates to thyroid function.3
However, hormones can’t fully explain the different rates of
thyroid problems between the genders. Speaking in general terms,
men have higher levels of testosterone, which makes them perhaps
biologically and socially predisposed to higher levels of assertive-
ness, especially when it comes to speaking.4 Overassertiveness or
an inability to skillfully speak up for yourself increase your chance
of thyroid ailments.5 Before women go through menopause, they
have higher levels of estrogen and progesterone in their bodies.
But there are other factors at play as well. These hormone levels,
combined with a brain style that more constantly mixes emotion
with language, lead to a tendency toward self-reflection. Women
who have not yet gone through menopause innately tend to be
less aggressive and impulsive in their communication, meaning
they are more likely to not say what they really think in an ef-
fort to preserve relationships and family ties. This communication
style often settles a tense situation but it doesn’t necessarily ad-
dress the personal needs of the woman involved, which can lead
to thyroid problems at a young age.6
Women’s communication styles—and their incidence of thy-
roid problems—change a great deal after menopause. In fact, the
number of postmenopausal women with thyroid problems is
higher than the number of men or younger women. As women
enter into menopause, the ratio of estrogen, progesterone, and
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testosterone shifts, with the first two falling and the last one ris-
ing. At this point, women become more impulsive and less re-
flective, and this new communication style often creates new
problems within their relationships and family. Then their in-
cidence of thyroid disorders escalates. Women are then biologi-
cally predisposed to assert themselves by reacting, moving, and
expressing more after menopause.7 Whether it is a matter of not
stating what you need or ineffectively expressing your desires, the
inability to communicate well leads to thyroid problems. If you
can’t assert yourself effectively and you feel hopelessly stifled or