Healing Network
I am interested in the healing of the whole person, body, mind and spirit. There are many amazing and grounded people who work with various aspects of healing, from body work to psychological healing to spiritual deepening. Here are a few "team" people who I've found who are valuable referral sources, especially when someone is at a turning point, or whose body or soul is speaking loudly of the need for healing. You probably have these types of people near where you live too, so have hope, listen to your body and soul, pray for what you need, and stay tuned...
Spiritual Directors: listed in a separate listing under Connect Link: Spiritual Directors
Touch for Health: Practitioners work by listening to your body and letting you know what the body, mind, spirit connections are for better health and healing.
Melissa Wells: Touch for Health: A body intuitive means to healing and restoring the whole self.
E.F.T. Emotional freedom technique: acupressure point tapping method that allows an individual to become more aware of their truth and let go of stifling fear.
Yoga (200 hour RYT certified and registered): A therapeutic approach using body postures to allow release. [email protected]
Massage Therapy: Use a certified massage therapist who is recommended for you. Go once a month if possible. It is soothing to your body, unstresses your muscles, and changes the character of your skin over time.
Gentle Yoga: Use Restorative yoga, to stretch, prevent ailments, reduce stress, stay flexible. A DVD I especially like is Yoga for the Rest of Us, by Peggy Cappy. Available from PBS television with a donation.
Complementary Medicine: MDs and others who are wholistic. They help with non-prescription actions that will prevent, restore or heal your body and soul.
Health Coaches: Coach you to stay on track with chronic diseases that need support and encouragement, help you choose life styles that you will retain, help you heal your memories of bad medical experiences.
Psychological Counseling: A must relationship when the issues that haunt you have their origins in your early family experiences. A good therapist is worth his/her weight in gold.
Jacquie Skog (specialty, domestic abuse), [email protected]
Donna Bennett (specialty; career counseling) [email protected] 612-839-6512 www.donnambennett.com
Healing Touch: They work with all the levels of energy in and outside the body, to center, balance, and heal your life. They are intuitive and instinctive healers.
Barb Schommer, [email protected]
Jan Halbach, 612-825-6451
"Wall" experts: Janet Hagberg, Ellen Duffield, [email protected], Lynn Smith, [email protected]
Spiritual Healing: Spiritual healing involves connections between our emotional needs for healing, our body messages and our spiritual journey. Healers probe to find the source of the emotional or spiritual pain and call the Holy to do the healing by pouring in God's love. (Several people are in a spiritual healing process and will be available for work in the next year.)
Book resources: The Chemistry of Joy by Henry Emmons: describes Eastern ways of reading your unique need for balance, and working with anxiety and depression.
Mind Over Medicine by Lissa Rankin: ways to be and stay healthy beyond eating well and exercising
Heal Your Body A to Z by Louise Hay: symptoms and the mind/spirit connection for healing
Who are You, God? Suffering and Intimacy with God by Janet Hagberg: suggests the connection between healing your image of God and using a process for healing to reduce suffering of all kinds.
Anatomy of the Spirit by Caroline Myss: a connection between symptoms, the chakras, the sacraments, and the Jewish tree of life.
Women's Bodies, Women's Wisdom by Christiane Northrup: body wisdom from years of experience as a physician
Spiritual Directors: listed in a separate listing under Connect Link: Spiritual Directors
Touch for Health: Practitioners work by listening to your body and letting you know what the body, mind, spirit connections are for better health and healing.
Melissa Wells: Touch for Health: A body intuitive means to healing and restoring the whole self.
E.F.T. Emotional freedom technique: acupressure point tapping method that allows an individual to become more aware of their truth and let go of stifling fear.
Yoga (200 hour RYT certified and registered): A therapeutic approach using body postures to allow release. [email protected]
Massage Therapy: Use a certified massage therapist who is recommended for you. Go once a month if possible. It is soothing to your body, unstresses your muscles, and changes the character of your skin over time.
Gentle Yoga: Use Restorative yoga, to stretch, prevent ailments, reduce stress, stay flexible. A DVD I especially like is Yoga for the Rest of Us, by Peggy Cappy. Available from PBS television with a donation.
Complementary Medicine: MDs and others who are wholistic. They help with non-prescription actions that will prevent, restore or heal your body and soul.
Health Coaches: Coach you to stay on track with chronic diseases that need support and encouragement, help you choose life styles that you will retain, help you heal your memories of bad medical experiences.
Psychological Counseling: A must relationship when the issues that haunt you have their origins in your early family experiences. A good therapist is worth his/her weight in gold.
Jacquie Skog (specialty, domestic abuse), [email protected]
Donna Bennett (specialty; career counseling) [email protected] 612-839-6512 www.donnambennett.com
Healing Touch: They work with all the levels of energy in and outside the body, to center, balance, and heal your life. They are intuitive and instinctive healers.
Barb Schommer, [email protected]
Jan Halbach, 612-825-6451
"Wall" experts: Janet Hagberg, Ellen Duffield, [email protected], Lynn Smith, [email protected]
Spiritual Healing: Spiritual healing involves connections between our emotional needs for healing, our body messages and our spiritual journey. Healers probe to find the source of the emotional or spiritual pain and call the Holy to do the healing by pouring in God's love. (Several people are in a spiritual healing process and will be available for work in the next year.)
Book resources: The Chemistry of Joy by Henry Emmons: describes Eastern ways of reading your unique need for balance, and working with anxiety and depression.
Mind Over Medicine by Lissa Rankin: ways to be and stay healthy beyond eating well and exercising
Heal Your Body A to Z by Louise Hay: symptoms and the mind/spirit connection for healing
Who are You, God? Suffering and Intimacy with God by Janet Hagberg: suggests the connection between healing your image of God and using a process for healing to reduce suffering of all kinds.
Anatomy of the Spirit by Caroline Myss: a connection between symptoms, the chakras, the sacraments, and the Jewish tree of life.
Women's Bodies, Women's Wisdom by Christiane Northrup: body wisdom from years of experience as a physician