At Soulphyre Integrative Health, we are dedicated to delivering top-notch healthcare services to our patients. Our goal is to ensure that every visit leaves our patients feeling supported and at ease. We prioritize addressing health concerns with the least invasive approaches whenever possible. By combining traditional medical practices with holistic treatments, we aim to provide comprehensive care that treats the whole person, not just the symptoms. Our team of compassionate and knowledgeable professionals is committed to fostering a welcoming environment where patients can openly discuss their health concerns and work collaboratively on personalized treatment plans. At Soulphyre Integrative Health, your well-being is our utmost priority.
At Soulphyre Integrative Health, we understand that healthcare is more than just treating illness. It's about caring for the whole person - body, mind, and spirit. That's why we take a holistic approach to healthcare, focusing on prevention, education, and wellness. Our team of compassionate healthcare professionals is dedicated to providing you with the support and guidance you need to achieve your health goals.
Bioregulatory medicine is a total body (and mind) approach to health and healing that aims to help facilitate and restore natural human biological processes. It is a proven, safe, gentle, highly effective, drugless, and side-effect-free medical model designed to naturally support the body to regulate, adapt, regenerate, and self-heal.
Bioregulatory medicine is a comprehensive and wholistic approach to health, which advocates the use of natural healing methods to support and restore the body’s intrinsic self-regulating, self-healing mechanisms. Bioregulation literally means the regulation of biological processes (with the Greek word bios meaning life).
Bioregulatory medicine promotes disease prevention, and early intervention of illness through non-toxic approaches. It employs the use of non-invasive diagnostic aids that view not only structural imbalances, but also functional, regulatory, energetic, and psycho-emotional conditions present in the patient.
Nutritional Medicine, also known as Nutritional Therapy, identifies nutritional and metabolic imbalances and determines how these contribute to your health concerns. By targeting these imbalances through dietary and lifestyle measures, Nutritional Medicine addresses the root cause of your health problems and supports the body back to optimum health and wellness.
Nutritional medicine/therapy uses a multi-step approach involving:
Optimising the diet to avoid detrimental foods and provide abundance of nutrients to correct any deficiencies
Balancing glucose and insulin levels
Supporting the immune system
Healing the gut
Enhancing detoxification and reducing toxin exposure
Balancing hormones
Stress management
Improving sleep
Lifestyle advice including exercise
To understand your specific problem is often like detective work using clues to find the cause of the issue. To accomplish this requires:
Thorough questioning in the consultation
Understanding each sign and symptom
Learning about family and personal medical history
Discovering use of medication
Functional testing using blood, stool, urine and/or saliva
If necessary for you, I can use a number of different laboratories to be able to test for virtually any issue, such as:
Genova Diagnostics for SIBO, parasites and other gut issues
The Doctors Laboratory for immunology, thyroid profile, haematology and biochemistry
Invivo for various microbiome testing
You are unique and therefore your nutrition programme is unique. In Nutritional Medicine, there is no “one size fits all” approach, but an individualised programme tailored to your exact health requirements will be created after understanding your needs. This may consist of the following:
Therapeutic diet.
Supplement regime providing optimal levels of nutrients, phyto-nutrients, enzymes, probiotics and more.
Herbal regime.
Lifestyle recommendations
Orthomolecular medicine is a form of alternative medicine that uses natural substances, such as vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and other essential nutrients, to prevent and treat disease. The concept is based on the idea of an optimal nutritional environment in the body and the correction of imbalances or deficiencies in individual biochemistry.
Dietary supplements, including vitamins, minerals, essential fatty acids, amino acids, flavonoids, herbs, and accessory food factors, are among the most valuable and safe substances for prevention and treatment of serious chronic and acute diseases associated with mortality, as well as everyday health problems that cause discomfort and disability. It is important to take adequate doses for their full benefits. Because they prevent deficiency diseases at low doses, they have acquired a reputation for being necessary only at these low levels. As a result, many physicians ignore the value of much higher doses that are useful for therapeutic purposes and protection from age-related degeneration.
Small amounts of essential nutrients treat deficiency diseases, but these conditions (scurvy, beri beri, pellagra, and rickets, for examples) are rarely seen in developed countries. Marginal nutrition associated with marginal health is much more likely to be the problem. For the most benefit from dietary supplements, it is important to ignore the RDA (recommended dietary allowances) levels that are found in food and most common dietary supplements and focus on the research that shows the benefits of appropriate doses, which are often much higher than the RDA.
Nutrients that are not essential but valuable as supplements include coenzyme Q10, alpha lipoic acid, GLA (gamma-linolenic acid), some non-essential amino acids, such as L-arginine, L-carnitine, and L-glutamine, and others. Additional valuable supplements, including flavonoids and other antioxidants, are found in foods but are not associated with specific deficiency diseases, although they provide specific health benefits in appropriate doses. People benefit from dietary supplements because of genetic physiological and biochemical variation, exposure to environmental contaminants, free radical damage from normal metabolism, exposure to ultraviolet light or ozone, and specific medical conditions. The process of aging leads to biochemical and physiological changes that can be slowed down and sometimes reversed through the appropriate use of dietary supplements.
An increasing number of scientific studies have been confirming the view that high doses of nutrients are therapeutic and preventive. Vitamins C and E, beta-carotene, B-complex vitamins, and coenzyme Q10 are among the many nutrients that have been shown to contribute positively to health and longevity at doses much higher than the RDA. While therapeutic levels for minerals, such as magnesium, zinc, and chromium, are much closer to the RDA, supplements beyond what is normally present in foods may still be essential for prevention and treatment of disease and slowing the aging process.
Supplements for anti-aging, prevention, and medical therapy-
Vitamin C
Vitamin C has a wide range of metabolic functions. It offers protection from oxidative free-radical damage and it is essential for the production of collagen. Vitamin C reduces the wrinkling and sagging of the skin that occurs with aging. Vitamin C also helps maintain mucous membranes, adrenal hormone production, and immune function, including humoral immunity, and phagocytosis.
While the US RDA for vitamin C was recently raised (for men from 60 mg to its current 90 mg, and for women from 45 mg to 75 mg, and somewhat more for smokers), even higher doses have greater health benefits. For example, in a placebo controlled trial for six months, 40 men and women between 60 to 80 years old were administered 500 mg of vitamin C daily. This moderate dose of vitamin C modestly but significantly lowered blood pressure (Fotherby et al 2000). In another study of 514 people, plasma vitamin C levels were inversely related to blood pressure and pulse rate (Bates et al 1998). Elevated blood pressure is a risk factor for age-related atherosclerotic disease.
Early research showed a significant difference in leukocyte vitamin C during a viral infection depending on the level of supplementation (Figure (Figure1).1). At the start of an infection, vitamin C levels in leukocytes drops precipitously. With supplements of 200 mg, the initial level is higher, but it also drops quickly to about the same level as with no supplementation. With supplements of 6000 mg, the level starts much higher and stays above what is considered a normal baseline for the duration of the infection, and symptoms improve more quickly (Anderson 1979).
A 1979 study showed immune system benefit from daily administration of 1g of vitamin C. Two children with autosomal recessive genetic chronic granulomatous disease were given this dose, prior to which they had recurrent infections, abnormal neutrophil function, and elevated serum IgE levels. They became free of recurrent infections and gained weight with this dose. Their neutrophil motility and phagocytosis improved while their serum immunoglobulin E (IgE) levels dropped (Anderson and Dittrich 1979). Also in 1979, 10 patients with recurrent bacterial infections were noted to have abnormal neutrophil motility. Six of the patients were administered oral vitamin C (1 g daily for children and 3 g daily for adults). Testing at monthly intervals showed consistent improvement in neutrophil motility and clinical improvement in 5 of the 6 patients (Anderson and Theron 1979).
Another study in 1980 evaluated the effect of vitamin C at 1 g, 2 g, and 3 g doses showed that neutrophil motility was enhanced with the higher doses, but not when the lower dose of 1 g was administered (Anderson et al 1980). More recently, a Japanese study of vitamin C and upper respiratory infections showed that the frequency of colds could be reduced by a daily 500 mg supplement. In this research, 244 subjects completed a protocol in which they were assigned to a daily dose of either 50 mg or 500 mg of vitamin C. The frequency of colds was much less in the high-dose group. Those taking the 500 mg dose had a 66% lower relative risk of catching a common cold (Sasazuki et al 2006).
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is another disorder that is influenced by vitamin C and other nutrients. In the Age-Related Eye Disease Study (AREDS) subjects were administered a mixture of antioxidants and zinc, including 500 mg of vitamin C. In this multi-center trial, 3640 subjects at various stages of AMD were randomly assigned to the treatment group or placebo, and were followed for an average of 6.3 years. The supplements reduced the risk of developing advanced AMD by 28%, and the higher-risk subjects did even better (AREDS 2001).
Overall, research suggests that vitamin C provides a wide variety of benefits in daily doses from 500 mg to 6000 mg, and higher doses may be of value in some conditions. Many of these benefits would be of particular value to the elderly, with compromised immunity, degenerative heart and brain disorders, as well as cancer and inflammatory processes. I typically recommend 3000 mg to 6000 mg daily for many patients.
Vitamin E
Vitamin E refers to a family of substances including alpha-, beta-, gamma-, and delta-tocopherols. The primary one in most research is alpha-tocopherol, but some research suggests that gamma-tocopherol is also very important. These are all antioxidants, and have many anti-aging effects. Vitamin E protects low density lipoprotein-cholesterol (LDL-C) from oxidation, and numerous epidemiological studies have suggested that higher vitamin E intake is associated with reduced heart disease and cardiac deaths (Knekt et al 1994). Elderly people with higher vitamin E blood levels are less likely to have signs of vascular aging and have reduced levels of LDL oxidation (Cherubini et al 2001). More recent intervention studies have not shown the same benefits in patients who already have heart disease, possibly because many of the studies used only pure alpha-tocopherol, and most of them used synthetic vitamin E (dl-alpha-tocopherol), not the natural d-alpha-tocopherol, which is more active.
Vitamin E can also enhance immune function. Supplements of 200 IU to 800 IU are associated with reduced rates of infection in elderly subjects (Meydani, Han, et al 2004). A study of 451 elderly subjects showed that 200 IU of vitamin E could reduce the incidence of viral upper respiratory infections, which are commonly associated with numerous complications in this age group (Meydani, Leka, et al 2004).
Although some recent studies suggested that high doses of vitamin E might increase the risk of cardiovascular mortality, these studies were flawed in numerous ways, and their conclusions are unreliable. A subsequent review showed that both vitamin E and vitamin C are safe across a wide range of doses (at least up to 1600 IU for vitamin E, and 2000 mg for vitamin C). This review was authored by some of the most respected researchers in the field of vitamins and antioxidants (Hathcock et al 2005). They noted that a large number of people take a broad range of supplements well beyond the RDA, and that no consistent pattern of adverse effects has been seen at any dose for either vitamin. In addition, these supplements have important roles in antioxidant, free-radical protection, antiinflammatory effects, and other functions in maintaining homeostasis.
As noted above, vitamin E is one of the antioxidants that were studied in the AREDS research which showed benefits for AMD when administered in doses of 400 IU daily. The other nutrients in the AREDS research were zinc (80 mg), beta carotene (15 mg or 25 000 IU), and copper (2mg). Other antioxidants and carotenoids might also be useful for AMD, such as lutein (a carotenoid) and alpha-lipoic acid (a lipid and aqueous phase antioxidant).
Coenzyme Q10
Coenzyme Q10 (ubiquinone, or coQ10) is an antioxidant that is essential for mitochondrial energy production. It is manufactured in the body, but with aging the amounts are inadequate for optimum health. CoQ10 is essential for the heart muscle, and it helps lower blood pressure, improve congestive heart failure, and protect the brain in degenerative conditions such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases (Morisco et al 1993). Statin drugs significantly lower the production of coQ10. Typical supplemental doses of coQ10 range from 100 mg daily for prevention against high blood pressure to 400 mg for heart disease patients (Munkholm et al 1999). With severe congestive heart failure, higher doses may be beneficial. In neurologic disorders, research is now showing benefits from coQ10 in doses of 1200 mg or more (Schults et al 2002).
Alpha lipoic acid
Alpha lipoic acid (ALA) is a sulfur-containing antioxidant that acts in both aqueous and lipid fractions of cells and tissues. It helps to detoxify heavy metals, such as mercury, and it helps protect neurologic tissues, and at high enough doses it can reverse early stages of diabetic peripheral neuropathy. Typical doses are from 100–200 mg for general prevention and up to 1000 mg for diabetics with neuropathy (Hahm et al 2004). At the higher doses it also helps to control blood sugar (Jacob et al 1999). Animal studies show that ALA protects the heart mitochondria against aging effects.
Chromium
Chromium is a trace mineral that helps to regulate blood sugar and lipid levels. Typical nutritional levels range from 50 mcg to 200 mcg in well nourished people. However, in diabetic patients, high doses of chromium, which are extremely safe, can significantly reduce blood sugar and enhance insulin sensitivity (Anderson et al 1997). When 1000 mcg of chromium were administered to type II diabetics, 90% of them were able to eliminate the need for medication to control blood sugar levels (Anderson 1997). Chromium supplements also lower total cholesterol and increase high density lipoprotein levels.
L-carnitine
L-carnitine is essential for the transport of free fatty acids across the mitochondrial membrane, where they are metabolized to create energy. Low L-carnitine levels reduce the functional capacity of the myocardium, leading to increases in angina and congestive heart failure. Supplements reduce angina and reduce mortality in patients with myocardial infarction. I typically recommend supplements of 1000 mg to 2000 mg of L-carnitine for prevention of heart disease for heart patients, and more in acute conditions.
Quercetin
Quercetin is a flavonoid that helps to control allergy symptoms of rhinitis and sinusitis. It stabilizes the membranes of mast cells, reducing the release of histamine. It is also helpful in lowering the risk of cataract by inhibiting glycoprotein formation in the lens (Cornish, et al 2002). Typical doses of quercetin are 800 mg to 1200 mg daily.
In conclusion Orthomolecular medicine is the restoration and maintenance of health through the administration of adequate amounts of substances that are normally present in the body. The aging process is typically accelerated as a result of free radical exposure, frequent or chronic inflammation, and toxic exposures (such as to heavy metals or industrial and agricultural hydrocarbons). Reversing this process or slowing it down is one goal of orthomolecular therapy, along with treatment of health problems.
Be prepared to unlearn everything you have previously learnt. This information may challenge you, and you may be tempted to deny and dismiss some of this research as it is so far removed from what we have been brought up to believe. But you need to keep your mind open to change, and your heart open to truth. In doing this, you may realise, as I have, that this is awakening what we truly and instinctively know.
This information is based upon 40 years of scientifically and clinically correlated research by Dr. med. Ryke Geerd Hamer. Dr Hamer was a German doctor who developed testicular cancer shortly after his son Dirk died after being accidentally shot. He wondered if the cancer was linked to the shock of losing his son, and after discovering all his cancer patients had also experienced unexpected, traumatic shocks before their disease occurred, he set about his research and German New Medicine was born.
Dr Hamer stated that if there was just one exception to a theory, then it was incorrect. No guesswork or assumptions, every discovery had to be found to be ‘without exception’ before it was stated as fact. GNM leaves no question unanswered and studying it reveals how many assumptions, unanswered questions and unproven science exists in the modern conventional medical world. It has been stated that Dr Hamer had a success rate of 98% of full recovery with his patients, which reduced to 92% if the patient had previous conventional treatment. The small percentage who did not pull through may have simply been due to the fact that they could not shake the fear of the so-called disease they were confronting.
In 1981, Dr Hamer completed a thesis which he submitted to the University of Tuebingen for evaluation, but it was rejected and he was told if he didn’t renounce his findings that he would lose his job. Not willing to abandon this life-saving research, he continued to work privately. However a few years later he lost his doctor licence on the grounds that he would not renounce his findings and conform to the conventional paradigm. He continued working privately, relying on other doctors for brain scans and patient records to continue his research, and despite continued attacks and intimidation, extradition to France, and even 2 unjustified stints in prison. He continued his work until he sadly died at age 82 in 2017 from a stroke. It is due to his persecution and the suppression of his findings, that this life-saving research is little-known today.
After analysing over 40,000 cases, Dr Hamer discovered the purpose of every so-called ‘disease’ and developed the ‘Five Biological Laws’. The science of German New Medicine is bound by the science of embryology (the development of the embryo) and follows evolutionary logic. His research proves without doubt that diseases are not malfunctions of our body but meaningful biological programmes set into motion by a specific conflict shock or trauma (which he calls a DHS or Dirk Hamer Syndrome after his late son Dirk). The conflict shock causes a lesion in the brain at the control relay of a specific body part that is instrumental in assisting our survival in coping with the specific trauma experienced. He also discovered that all of these biological processes run in 2 phases, a conflict-active phase and a healing phase which runs after the conflict is resolved, and this is when most symptoms will occur. This means that when we experience symptoms, we are actually healing and not malfunctioning!
To explain GNM, we can look at the Five Biological Laws:
The First Biological Law (the Iron Rule of Cancer)
The First Biological Law has 3 criteria:
1. Every ‘disease’ is a Special Biological Programme which is set off by an “unexpected, highly acute, and isolating conflict shock that occurs simultaneously in the psyche, the brain, and on the corresponding organ.”
A conflict shock is something that occurs unexpectedly and catches us unprepared and off-guard. This is very subjective and the type of conflict that is experienced depends on the person’s perception of the situation which is based upon their beliefs, upbringing, emotional state, etc.
For example, a divorce may be experienced as an abandonment conflict (affecting the kidneys), self- devaluation conflict (affecting the muscles, lymphs nodes or bones), separation conflict (affecting the skin), starvation conflict (affecting the liver), indigestible morsel (affecting the digestive system/GI tract), etc. – or a combination of these.
The conflict theme is directly related to the function of the related organ, e.g. a morsel conflict would affect the alimentary canal (either unable to catch, eliminate or digest a morsel). As humans are emotional, complex beings, the conflict can be of a figurative nature. For example, a death fright conflict can be experienced when a cancer diagnosis is received. We can even suffer a conflict on behalf of someone else!
2. The content of the conflict determines which organ will be affected and from which area of the brain the biological programme will be controlled. Specific conflicts will trigger a specific biological programme to run, the purpose of which is to make the organ stronger or more efficient so we can cope with and survive the unexpected trauma. For example, a death-fright conflict will trigger extra cells to grow in the lung to enable more surface area for more oxygen to be brought into the body to help prevent death.
3. Every Biological Programme runs simultaneously on the level of the psyche, the brain, and the correlating organ. “The differentiation between the psyche, the brain, and the body is purely academic. In reality, they are one.” (Ryke Geerd Hamer)
The perception of the conflict occurs entirely on a subconscious level. Generally there are no symptoms in the conflict-active phase; hence, we will not know which type of conflict we have experienced until symptoms arise in the healing phase. The intensity of the healing phase depends on the intensity of the conflict and the length of time we were in the conflict-active phase.
The Second Biological Law – Every Biological Special Program runs in two phases provided there is a resolution of the conflict.
Phase 1 is known as the Conflict-active phase. It is a time of stress, difficulty sleeping, cold hands, and generally no physical symptoms. While the conflict is active, the biological programme is facilitating the survival and coping of the conflict by either creating more cells (to increase surface area for more absorption, for example) or cell loss (ulceration) to widen a vessel (to allow more flow of bodily fluid through, for example).
Once the conflict is resolved, the healing phase begins. This is the body’s way of getting back to normal, and is where the symptoms of ‘disease’ as we know them begin. The healing process is assisted by bacteria such as TB, fungi such as Candida and other microbes which, until activated by the brain, remain dormant (if not wiped out by overuse of antibiotics and vaccines). These microbes either help to break down additional cells or replenish cells depending on the biological programme that is running. There is inflammation in this phase, and thus often pain, as the body actually requires a fluid environment for the healing to take place. There are also sweats, particularly night sweats if TB bacteria is involved, and tiredness, often fatigue. This is because our body needs minimal movement and to rest in order to heal. Where there are night sweats meaning TB bacteria is involved, it is important to consume more protein as TB produce a lot of discharge containing high amount of proteins. What we see in patients that appear to be wasting away with a serious disease, is actually protein loss and this can be fatal.
The main point to take from this phase is that our symptoms are nothing to fear. They are purposeful and are an indication that we are actually in healing. Conventionally we try to turn away from symptoms through inconvenience and fear. But working with the symptoms, supporting the process and allowing the healing to happen with a positive mindset is what is required to ensure the healing phase is completed.
Once the first part of healing phase (PCL-A) is complete, the body needs to push out the waste. So the body temporarily goes back into the ‘stress’ phase in what is known as an ‘Epileptoid Crisis’. At this phase we see symptoms such as nose bleeds, coughing fits, abdominal cramps, etc. depending on the biological programme that is running its course.
Then the second part of the healing phase (PCL-B) sees discharges, sometimes bleeding, mucous, pus, diarrhoea, etc. as the body rids itself of the toxins and waste products produced during healing, and finally the scarring and healing of the tissue.
Chronic conditions are caused by a ‘hanging healing’ which is when the body cannot complete the healing phase. This can be due to conflict relapses, poor diet, certain medications, and stimulants which can push the body back into the conflict-active phase by taken the body out of the vagatonic (relaxed, unstressed) state. This may cause symptoms to disappear (due to there being no symptoms in the conflict-active phase). This can create a belief that the medication/stimulant is helping – but in reality it is not allowing the biological programme to complete its healing.
Allergies are caused when ‘tracks’ are created that are basically triggers of the original conflict. When these triggers are experienced, the biological programme is reactivated.
The Third Biological Law
In line with embryology, the control relays of our organs are found in the part of the brain that developed at the same time as the organ. All organs controlled from the same part of the brain will run the same biological programme. For example: in all organs that are controlled from the brainstem and cerebellum there will be cell proliferation in the conflict-active phase and cell removal by TB bacteria and fungi in the healing phase; in all organs that are controlled from the cerebral medulla and the cerebral cortex, there will be cell loss in the conflict-active phase, which will be replenished during the healing phase).
The Fourth Biological Law – Microbes don’t cause diseases but play instead a vital role during the healing phase.
During the healing phase, bacteria such as TB, streptococcus, staphylococcus, and fungi such as Candida will become active in order to remove the additional cells that are no longer required or to assist the replenishing of tissue. Each type of microbe has its own specific task. So-called “infections” such as a Candida infection (commonly known as candidiasis) occur therefore in the healing phase. Its intensity is proportional to the length and intensity of the conflict-active phase. Microbes require an acidic environment in which to thrive and work. Therefore the acidic imbalance is not the cause of disease, but an essential part of healing.
The Fifth Biological Law – Every so-called disease is part of a Significant Biological Special Program of Nature created to assists an organism (humans and animals alike) during unexpected distress.
Dr. Hamer: “All so-called diseases have a special biological meaning. While we used to regard Mother Nature as fallible and had the audacity to believe that She constantly made mistakes and caused breakdowns (malignant, senseless, degenerative cancerous growths, etc.) we can now see, as the scales fall from our eyes, that it was our ignorance and pride that were and are the only foolishness in our cosmos. Blinded, we brought upon ourselves this senseless, soulless and brutal medicine. Full of wonder, we can now understand for the first time that Nature is orderly and that every occurrence in Nature is meaningful, even in the framework of the whole. Nothing in Nature is meaningless, malignant or diseased.”
Assisting Healing
Conventionally, we want to stop our symptoms and move away from them. True healing exists when we embrace our symptoms as the healing they are, feeling relief that our conflict has been resolved. Moving through our symptoms, and therefore through the healing, and understanding what to expect removes any fear or concern over what is happening. Working with our symptoms to allow healing to progress is paramount. Stiffness and pain cause immobility, and is our body’s way of saying “don’t move in that particular fashion as I need to heal this area”, fatigue is our body’s way of saying “rest as I need to use the energy to heal”, and so on. We can learn to listen to what our symptoms are telling us and prevent self-devaluation by having positive thoughts and attitude. This is essential as negative thinking can trigger new conflicts such as self-devaluation or existence conflicts, and exacerbate the situation.
Supporting our health with a well-balanced, healthful diet will facilitate our ability to heal efficiently and effectively. Purposefully selected foods, supplements, herbs and remedies that work in harmony with the phase we are experiencing will also support the healing process. An excellent way of assessing what the body needs is through an energetic testing method such as kinesiology muscle testing, or simply knowing the properties of different substances, and avoiding the stimulants throughout the healing phase so as not to disrupt the vagatonic state.
Most important is a true understanding of the conflict and learning from the experience so we do not suffer a similar conflict in the future. Understanding the reasons for our symptoms is paramount to facilitate the healing process.
Understanding the GNM principles confirms that therapies themselves cannot alone offer a ‘cure’. However there are many ways we can support the natural process with therapies, though we need to take into account the phase we are in. Some examples are Reiki Healing, which is useful in the healing phase to help to de-stress and relax, and a gentle, pampering massage can promote a feeling of relaxation and well-being during this phase. Mindfulness and meditation is useful throughout the biological programme when we need to change our perception of situations and relieve old patterns, and this can be assisted with hypnotherapy or sound therapy if need be. Kinesiology at each phase through the biological programme can assess what the body needs and wants at that time, addressing deficiencies and toxicities and bringing our body back into a balanced state to enable it to better cope with the heaing process. Homeopathy works in harmony with the body’s own healing so works well with GNM. Nutritional Therapy and Aromatherapy with a therapist who understands GNM principles, may be used effectively to facilitate the process. Although it is not going to necessarily resolve a conflict, EFT tapping may help manage stress and anxiety, and help to ‘downgrade’ an intense conflict. It is always advisable to seek a therapist who has a firm knowledge of GNM so their actions do not bring about a severe healing crisis, or are contra-indicatory to the phase you are experiencing.
Causes of ‘Disease’
Understanding the meaningful biological programmes of diseases, we can see that a poor diet, toxins, smoking, and so on cannot in themselves cause disease, but that is not to say that they can’t damage our organs. Malnutrition causing deficiencies, toxicities and injuries can all cause symptoms in absence of a conflict shock.
So what can we do to prevent disease?
We will experience conflicts which will lead to ‘disease’, so we cannot really prevent them. But we can help ourselves in the following ways:
For more information, you can visit the website learninggnm.com. This has been compiled and is run by Caroline Markolin, PhD who was one of Dr Hamer’s students and works to keep his research unadulterated and true to Dr Hamer’s findings.
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