Tuesday, December 13, 2005

Where are the Edges

“Where are the Edges?”

Someone asked me today, “where are your learning edges?”    What an important question that is……because the edges are where the discomfort with the status quo lives. The edges are points of change and growth, and healing.

So – I encourage you to ask yourself the same question, and to explore the thoughts and feelings that arise when that question is dropped into your awareness.   “Where are your edges?”  

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

"Develop the Energy"

Last Week I was in New York and paid a visit to my dear friend Dr. Steven Weiss. He is a wonderfully gifted hands-on Osteopath who works very subtly in the cranial-sacral system of the body. During our conversation I was reminded of how many strains of knowledge and study inform my own hands-on energy work.
My very first teacher of any kind of healing work was the Shiatsu(acupressure) master, Shizuko Yamamoto. I was lucky enough to join her for dinner one night, and engage in discussion about healing. I had been wondering if Shiatsu was my calling, hoping that I could study intensely with her. And so I asked her to help guide me.
Shizuko Yamamoto, this great healer, said a few words which have always stayed with me. Quite simply and quietly she said:
“It is not the method, it is the energy that matters. Develop the Energy.”
And so, I spent the next thirty years doing just that, developing the energy. My healing signature is an energy that merges, and absorbs deeply through the layers of tissue and organs, and vibrates lovingly in the larger energy field. I’ve been fortunate enough to be called to the service of offering healing to people through the sharing of this energy.

The Importance of Sleep for Women - About Healing Post

Eight-plus Hours Sleep Reduces Women's Breast Cancer Risk
HealthNewsDigest.com
October 17, 2005
Women who sleep longer than eight hours per night are at lower risk of breast cancer according to a new study by a University of Connecticut School of Medicine researcher.
The study, published Oct. 15 in the journal Cancer Research, was based on a follow-up of 12,000 women for 20 years, and showed women who reported sleeping nine or more hours per night at the start of the follow-up, had about one third the risk of breast cancer over the next 20 years compared to women sleeping less.
The study was based on a larger theory of breast cancer which suggests that womens exposure to light at night, leads to lowered melatonin levels which increase the risk of cancer. The study adds to the evidence that light at night is an important risk factor for breast cancer.
This is very strong study, said Richard Stevens, Ph.D., cancer epidemiologist, Department of Community Medicine and Health Care. This was a large number of women, followed for a long period of time in Finland with excellent follow-up, he said. We assessed their sleep duration two times over the follow-up period, and we feel confident about the womens exposure, and were sure about the outcome.
The works builds on earlier work by Stevens which found increased risk of breast cancer in shift-working women, and lower risk in blind women. The study Stevens collaborated with a Finnish research team from the National Public Health Institute in Helsinki reveals that the longer a woman sleeps, the lower her risk of breast cancer. Women were asked twice, six years apart, how long they slept. The reduced breast cancer risk was strongest in those women who reported the same amount of sleep each time.
The result may be due to a longer dark period for long sleepers, and thereby less light at night.
The study supported the prediction of the Light at Night theory of breast cancer causation, said Stevens. The theory posits that if there is light at night, women are at risk; long sleepers get more dark and should be at lower risk.
The results supported that hypothesis, Stevens said.
Stevens said Finnish cultural and social norms made the study very high quality, and stronger than could be accomplished in most other places. Because of the countrys nationalized medicine and homogenous population, follow-up percentages were near 100 percent.
Dr. Stevens is available to talk about the study. Call Patrick Keefe, 860-679-2447 to arrange an interview.
The University of Connecticut Health Center includes the schools of medicine and dental medicine, John Dempsey Hospital, the UConn Medical Group and University Dentists. Founded in 1961, the Health Center pursues a mission of providing outstanding health care education in an environment of exemplary patient care, research and public service.
© Health News Digest.com 2004 All Rights Reserved.