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
approve of myself. I am safe); general inflammation (My thinking
is peaceful, calm, and centered); health conditions that include
the suffix -itis (I am willing to change all patterns of criticism.
I love and approve of myself); general bone health (I am well
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structured and balanced); bone deformity (I breathe in life fully. I
relax and trust the flow and the process of life), cavities (I fill my
decisions with love and compassion. My new decisions support
me and strengthen me. I have new ideas and put them into action.
I am safe in my new decisions); and osteomyelitis (I am peaceful
with and trust the process of life. I am safe and secure).
Sierra’s new eating habits, medicine, behavioral modifications,
and affirmations helped her overcome the pain and inflammation
that were affecting her mouth—and in the meantime, she was
also creating some healthy, lasting relationships.
Neck Problems
Neck pain, arthritis, and stiffness often come to those peo-
ple who have amazing communication skills—both listening
and speaking. Trying to see both sides of almost any story, they
often become ill when their ability to clearly communicate things
doesn’t work as they expect it to. When an argument can’t be
settled by talking or when something in their lives goes wrong
and they can’t control it, they often become aggravated and stub-
born, sticking to their opinion and refusing to consider other
viewpoints. The frustration that leads to the breakdown in com-
munication often creates illness in the neck.
If you are one of the millions of people who suffer pain, stiff-
ness, arthritis, whiplash, slipped disks, and other neck problems,
you have probably tried the gamut of treatments, including sur-
gery, chiropractic, acupuncture, traction, yoga, or medications for
pain. Any or all of these may offer temporary relief but probably
won’t provide a permanent cure. So what is the prescription for
better and more balanced communication and lasting relief from
painful neck problems?
In addition to medicine and behavioral changes, you must
identify and change the negative thoughts that are triggering
your health problems. In Louise’s affirmation theory, the healthy
neck and cervical spine represents flexibility and the ability to see
both sides of a conversation. But turn this concept on its head by
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introducing an unbending mind-set or bullheadedness and health
turns to illness and disease—in this case, a stiff or painful neck.
People with neck problems, in general, tend to not be as good at
the listening aspect of communication because they cling to set
opinions and block out new ideas. They tend to be stubborn and
inflexible and unable to see or understand other people’s points of
view. A good affirmation to counter inflexibility and the closed-
mindedness associated with general neck problems is “I welcome
new ideas and new concepts and prepare them for digestion and
assimilation. I am peaceful with life.” Although the general theme
is communication, your affirmation will vary depending on the
source of the pain and the underlying emotion. For example, a
slipped disk in the neck is associated with feeling unsupported by
life and also with being indecisive and not able to communicate
your thoughts or needs clearly. So to heal, meditate on the words
“Life supports all of my thoughts; therefore, I love and approve of
myself and all is well.”
As you incorporate affirmations into your everyday life, you
should begin to notice a shift in the way you think.
Once your neck is healthier, some fundamental changes must
occur to maintain equilibrium while moving forward. Learning
to accept your emotional limitations in the middle of a discus-
sion is one key to improving your neck problems. You do have
an amazing skill for intuitively listening, understanding, and
making logical arguments. However, you must accept where your
intellectual power to reason and communicate ends. When you
encounter conflicts that you can’t resolve, don’t push your opin-
ion stubbornly, adding to the frustration of the situation. Instead
remind yourself that there are multiple answers to every problem.
Realize that your role is only one part of the solution. Finding bal-
ance between what you can control and what you can’t and know-
ing when it is time to walk away from conflict will lead to better
health in the fifth emotional center.
Important practices for those who might have neck problems
are meditation and mindfulness. Meditation can help you become
more in touch with your emotions, and living mindfully will help
you understand how these emotions affect you in the moment.
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Once you are able to identify the sensations and emotions that
indicate a shift in your communication style from diplomat to
dictator, you can consciously make the choice to listen even more
closely. You can work harder to keep an open mind. So when you
experience a difficult conflict, you will be able to come to it with a
new perspective and a sense of peace. It’s important to realize that
people can disagree on a point of view and still be in harmony,
peace, and love with one another. What a concept.
We can create so many problems for ourselves by our attitudes.
Stubbornness, inflexibility, and trying to fix other people against
their will can all contribute to neck problems.
From the Clinic Files: Neck Problems Case Study
Raelynn, age 52, was famous in her family for her ability to
settle a disagreement, often to the satisfaction of all parties. Every
time there was a major legal dispute in the news, her family would
joke that Raelynn could win it, no problem. Whether it was a fam-
ily quarrel or a disagreement at work, Raelynn was truly a master
negotiator—able to see both sides of the argument. But she could
also be stubborn and willful, like a dog with a bone, not giving up
but not listening either. On these occasions she became aggressive
and angry and turned people off.
Raelynn mostly led by enthusiastic example throughout her
life, raising her two children alone while working as a nurse prac-
titioner. She believed in the power of positive thinking and taught
her children as well as her patients that anything is possible if you
set your mind to it. Raelynn’s children, however, failed to thrive.
Both ended up in trouble with the law at very young ages, and
Raelynn worked tirelessly to help them.
As her adult-age children continued to struggle, Raelynn
began to feel a sharp, shooting pain in her neck along with weak-
ness, numbness, and tingling in some of her fingers.
To help Raelynn create a healthier neck, we needed her to know
what a healthy neck would look like. Our spines are composed of
a series of bones—vertebrae—stacked on top of one another and
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separated with puffy, shock-absorbing pillows called disks. The
vertebrae and disks are critical in that they protect the spinal cord
and its nerves, which run from the brain to every movable limb
in the body.
The sudden onset of Raelynn’s symptoms was scary to her,
and even her doctors were quite concerned. When neck problems
get worse quickly, as Raelynn’s had, neurologists often suspect
that a disk or something even more serious may be compressing
nerves or the spinal cord. Even though Raelynn wanted to go out
and “walk off the pain,” we suggested she follow her neurologist’s
suggestion to get an MRI to better understand what was happen-
ing in her neck.
There were two possibilities for Raelynn. She could have a disk
bulge, in which the shock-absorbing disk is slightly misshapen but
there is still room for the spinal cord to move. This less-severe in-
jury could be treated with over-the-counter pain medication such
as aspirin or Advil. She could also implement acupuncture,
qigong,
and Yamuna body rolling to strengthen her muscles above and
below the neck to prevent symptoms.
The other possibility was a slipped disk, and this ended up
being Raelynn’s problem. The MRI verified that she had a cervical
disk prolapse in the C7 vertebrae of her neck. It also showed that
the disk was compressing the spinal cord and pushing it against
the vertebrae. Raelynn’s doctors were concerned about this esca-
lating into a neurological injury.
Given the rapid progression of Raelynn’s symptoms and the
fact that the disk was compressing her spinal cord, her medical
team decided that surgery was her best option. Raelynn picked a
neurosurgical team that she trusted and we made sure she met and
liked her anesthesiologist before the surgery.
To prepare for her surgery, we suggested that Raelynn use im-
agery practices. Visualizations and imagery work have been shown
to calm and relax patients and promote tissue healing during and
after surgery. We helped Raelynn visualize exactly what the sur-
geon would be doing in her neck in the operating room, so she
could “assist” with her own surgery even though she was anes-
thetized. Before she lay down on the pre-op table, Raelynn knew
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that the neurosurgeons were going to go in through the front of
her neck, “decompress,” or remove, some of her vertebral bone,
remove the disk, and replace it with a metal prosthetic “cage” to
make her neck more sturdy.
After the surgery, Raelynn was amazed; she was 100 percent
pain free. But she wanted to keep her neck healthy. Exercise is a
very important part of rehabilitation, but she wouldn’t be able to
work out for a few months following her surgery. We suggested
that when she finally got back to the gym, she give up running
and use an elliptical trainer instead. The Cybex arc trainer is spe-
cifically designed to prevent the neck-injuring lean-forward posi-
tion. We also recommended that she buy high-quality shoes with
great shock resistance. Nike Shox, Asics Gel-Kinsei shoes, or others
with similar support would help put padding under her feet and
thus under her spine.
Even though she didn’t have a personality disorder, Raelynn
bought the book
Skills Training Manual for Treating Borderline Person-
ality Disorder
by Marsha Linehan and learned the communication
skill exercise called DEAR MAN. This mindfulness-assertiveness
exercise teaches you how to say something at the right volume and
with the right words and inflections to maximize positive results.
Through this, she would learn when and how to say something
to her children, patients, or loved ones and when to let things go.
She also tried to meditate daily to become more in tune with her
feelings. With these skills she would be able to identify the frustra-
tion she felt in the heat of an argument and perhaps step back and
not become so stubborn. Finally, Raelynn worked to learn
qigong
to ease her stress.
Raelynn also started working with the affirmations for general
neck health (I am peaceful with life); neck problems (It is with
flexibility and ease that I see all sides of an issue. There are endless
ways of doing things and seeing things. I am safe); degenerative
disks (I am willing to learn to love myself. I allow my love to sup-
port me. I am learning to trust life and accept its abundance. It is
safe for me to trust); general pain (I lovingly release the past. They
are free and I am free. All is well in my heart now); and general
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joint health (I easily flow with change. My life is Divinely guided,
and I am always going in the best direction).
As with everything else in her life, Raelynn kept a positive
outlook and worked to overcome her thought patterns and behav-
iors that led to her neck problems. She was soon back in the game,
with a better perspective on life and communication.
Thyroid Problems
People who have thyroid problems are often so porous and
intuitive that they can see what needs to happen in other people’s
lives to make them better. Unfortunately, their solutions are often
unpopular, and these people frequently don’t know how to give
voice to what they know in a way that would be socially accept-
able. They often try to express themselves indirectly, hinting at
what they want or being very tentative—all in an effort to avoid
conflict. However, if a situation gets too bad or their frustration