Healing Methods
Chakra & Aura Healing
Aurahealing: As human beings, we radiate a very low level of electricity that’s otherwise known as an electromagnetic field. This electromagnetic field is also known as “aura”. Every experience, thought, and intention directly influences our energy field, our aura. All these experiences, thoughts and intentions, together with our living environment, have a direct influence on our aura, and therefore on us as individuals. The aura actually forms the connection between the world around you and your body, your thoughts and what others feel in your presence. The aura is also a giant memory bank. A feeling, an experience, a trauma large or small may have already been forgotten – but is still present in the aura. Aurahealing means: healing people by healing the energy field that every human has around them.
Chakrahealing: The basis of chakra healing comes from Indian Hinduism. The chakras are an integral part of the human being as a holistic, energetic being. Just as our limbs and head are part of the body, the chakras are an integral and important part of our body and energy system. The chakras are located in the physical body as well as outside it, in the auric field, and also form the connection between them. Chakra healing is a way to get the energy level of your different chakras back in balance. By opening your chakras again (or sometimes closing them a bit), physical and mental complaints can disappear.
A disturbance in the physical area, for example due to nutrition or mental tension, will manifest itself in the affected chakras and then in the aura. Conversely, a disturbance in the aura, for example due to the influence of your living environment, the people around you, radiation or other aspects, will also manifest itself in one or more chakras after some time. This means that it is sometimes necessary to treat and balance the aura, the body and the chakras during a healing session.
German New Medicine (GNM)
The core idea of GNM is that traumas cause the body to respond in primal ways to help us survive. In other words, symptoms that we think of as disease are often attempts by the body to help us. Each symptom relates to a particular trauma.
There is a very specific correlation between our physical symptoms, our brain and unexpected emotional distress in our lives. Scientific research has provided us with a “map” that can help identify what symptoms and organs are controlled from what areas of the brain and also what type of emotional distress we experienced.
GNM helps us to understand the cause, the development and the natural healing of diseases. GNM provides us a new understanding of “diseases” as “Biological Special Programs” built into all organisms, in order to assist us in dealing with unexpected, emotionally distressing situations.
When we experience a “conflict shock” (i.e. an unexpected and distressing event, phone call, email, comment, criticism etc.), an “impact”, will instantly appear somewhere in the brain, that is visible on a CT scan as a set of sharp concentric rings. The area of the brain affected by this “impact” will initiate physiological changes in a specific organ of the body controlled from that particular area of the brain. These organ changes are what manifests as our physical symptoms (i.e. joint pain, skin rash, diarrhea, etc.). Our ability to identify and resolve the original “conflict shock”, will signal the brain to stop the physiological changes on the organ level, often leading to symptom relief.
PRI
Past Reality Integration, abbreviated PRI, helps you live fully in the now. The clear model shows you how your past influences your current life. But more importantly, PRI offers you the opportunity to remove these blocks. With effective techniques and practical tools that you learn to apply independently.
PRI assumes that emotions and behavioural patterns that affect us in our daily lives are caused by an old trauma that lies underneath. A trauma that originated somewhere in the early years of our lives, of which we are usually unaware.
Whether it concerns depression, burnout, anxiety or panic attacks, addiction, eating or relationship problems, in almost all cases the cause of your problem lies earlier in your life and your problems cover the feeling of that old pain. If you address that old pain, your symptoms in the present will disappear.
The aim of PRI therapy is not to keep feeling that old pain in the hope of removing it. The goal of PRI is to be able to live more and more without problems, without defences. Even if your behaviour is still activated, you will recognize it more quickly and be able to dismantle it, so that you can consciously stop the destructive effect of your behaviour. And you can begin to experience the present for what it is; usually surprisingly unburdened.
Transformational Coaching
In the transformational coaching space I explore your view of the world, view of self and your relationships. This will involve looking at your current set of assumptions around things that matter most to you, your beliefs, your values, your use of language and what this reveals around your view of the world, the stories that have been created in your life and how this affects how you live. I provide a space to improve your self-awareness and to see yourself afresh. This root-cause approach can help to facilitate a profound change in your life.
In our sessions the following principles are key:
Deep listening: Absorbing all stimuli, the coach is aware of both what is being said and that which remains unsaid
Holding space: Creating a safe environment for the client to fully open up
Observing and identifying: Seeing the client’s beliefs and patterns of behaviour, both transactionally and what lies below the surface
Reflecting back: Sharing significant information with the client from what the coach has heard, seen and felt in the session
Challenge: Where relevant the coach will ask the difficult question to elicit change through bringing into the space what isn’t being said
Holistic: Coaches pay attention to all aspects of a client’s experience – the cognitive, affective, somatic, relational and behavioural dimensions