About treatments
The treatments you find here
are treatments that I went through myself.
Some are very straightforward, accepted or condoned by conventional medicine, others are far from it, and in some cases, even considered illegal in many countries.
I wanted to be as honest as I could when describing my healing journey, as I know in how much pain someone can be, and how willing you are in that case to try just about anything to escape that.
However, this doesn’t mean that everything I did, would work in the same way for you. (and that therefore you should try it as well!)
As a final note; I did never expect hat some of my physical pain had a direct connection to emotional trauma. However, a couple of the treatments I have written about unlocked and shifted emotions and trauma I did not know I had, and with a result, my physical body healing too.
I wish for you to have access to similar outcomes, and therefore I would recommend to read about these treatments with an open mind full of curiosity, as for me it helped so much in my day to day life.
I hope what I write can be of inspiration,
and could open your mind on all of the different things that are still possible when you’re dealing with chronic pain.
However, I want to emphasize once more that I am not a medical professional, and therefore you should not take this as medical advice in any way.
Take this website as a first step into your research, and from there find out what possibilities are still out there that you haven’t tried, but could potentially be a great next step.
Be careful and responsible: there are al lot of great health professionals out there and the alternative circuit does offer a lot of out of the box experiences that conventional medicine (and scientifically backed research do not (yet)).
Please do take into account that the alternative circuit is not always straightforward, and when there is no regulation, there might be risk.
Make sure that you take accountability for the people you meet and situations you put yourself in.
I am the first one to agree that pain can blind your judgement, but that is not a position you want to bring yourself in. When something doesn’t feel right, double down on support and involve other people. Make sure you cannot regret the decisions that you take.
First things first: you need to ensure your safety and be aware how a bad experience can affect your mental health. In the blog section I’ve written about some of these hurdles.
My experience here is to take baby-steps. I’ve tried (as much as I could) to work with people that I got recommend via someone in my network, and I was always on the look out for people who had been in similar positions to my own. Often, because they understand and have walked the line, they were most likely to give me good advice on what to do next.
P.s. If you feel like I’ve missed a treatment, or you have a suggestion of something that worked really well for you that you would like to share, then don’t hesitate to get in touch, I would love to hear from you.