Accepting Your Healing
by Martin Brofman, Ph.D. - http://www.healer.ch - healer@healer.ch
Each type of illness
is associated with a particular way of being. There is a
personality type associated with heart disease, there is
another associated with cancer, another with
nearsightedness, etc. The person’s way of being has had
stress associated with it, and that stress has reached the
physical level, manifesting as a symptom.
When someone wants to
release a symptom, they must release the way of being that
was associated with the symptom, and which, in fact, created
it. Releasing the stress from the consciousness allows them
to then have different perceptions, and a different way of
being. There is a change in the nature of the bubble, the
filter of perceptions through which they see the world. Said another way, since our perceptions create our reality,
there is a change or movement from one bubble to another,
from one reality to another, from one paradigm to another.
Thus, we can say that the process of healing implies a process of transformation. In the experience of this writer, recovery from catastrophic illness is always accompanied by a change in the person's way of being. They change, or else continue to manifest the symptoms until they die. Those who change are able to see things differently in their life, and to notice that things happen in ways different from before. They are able, through having different experiences, to define different beliefs. Or, they are able to first define different beliefs, and then have different experiences.
The important thing,
in either case, is to release old perceptions that have been
based on old experiences, if those perceptions have resulted
in a tense way of interacting with the environment.
One way to achieve
this reprogramming, this perception modification, is by
recognizing the element of time as a possible distorting
influence in our internal programs and perceptions, and
choosing to not prejudice our positive view of the present
and future by our negative experience of the past.
For example, someone
might have a program in his or her human biocomputer that
says, “Every time I see that person, I get a headache!”
Then, given the person, the headache is expected, so that
the individual has a chance to affirm that truth, the
program that is believed to be true, and therefore, is true
for them. Unfortunately, the program always results in a
headache, so although the program is very effective and
efficient, the result is something unpleasant.
To release the
program while still acknowledging what is true, we can
describe it as having been true in the past. Then, the
program would say, “Every time that I have seen that person,
I have gotten a headache - but the next time might be
different. Perhaps the other person has realized the error
of his or her ways, or has become enlightened, or
transformed (it’s always a change in the other person). For
the next time, I’ll see what happens and what is true then.”
Then, direct
experience can show that something different is, in fact,
true. “Wow! This person really is different - and actually,
quite pleasant to be around! I’m sure I will never again
get a headache from being around this person.” From that
moment, with those words, a new belief is created, and new
perceptions are allowed, and a new reality is created with
the new belief.
If you are interested
in experiencing the process of healing, and therefore, the
process of transformation, what is particularly important is
the way you describe yourself to yourself. This is because
the words that you use to describe your experience create
your reality, and you are interested in the creation of a
different reality in which you feel better than you did
before.
Thus, it’s important
to pay attention to the words that you use to describe
yourself. If you are describing some trait you do not find
particularly successful (I’m shy, or afraid of success, or
naturally irritable, etc.), then with your words, leave it
in the past, making room for a different perception in the
present, and also the future (“I was shy, or have been
afraid of success, or had been irritable because I was not
really being myself, etc.).
In that way, you will
be able to more easily dis-identify with and therefore let
go of old ideas, and old tensions associated with the
symptoms to be released.
The same is true
about the words you use to describe the symptom to be
released. Consider the element of time, and be able to
describe the symptom to yourself as you experience in the
present moment. If you say, “It hurts all day,” you may not
be noticing that, in fact, it doesn’t hurt so much right
now. If you say, “The symptom comes and goes,” and if you do
not experience it right now, you expect it to return. It is
more effective to describe your experience in the present
moment, acknowledging what is true now, and with a positive
orientation toward a positive future (“It’s better now than
it has been. In fact, it really seems to be getting better
and better.”)
The positive mental
attitude is, of course, an element useful for enjoying the
best quality of life achievable. For the process of healing,
however, it is essential.
Whatever you
visualize, you improve the probability of happening. The
images or pictures that you put into your consciousness have
more of a tendency to happen. If you continue to put into
your consciousness pictures of yourself suffering, you tend
to continue that condition. It does not even matter what
emotion you have with the picture - it is the picture that
is important. Thus, if you have a picture of what you do not
want, you are still having a tendency to fill your
consciousness with that picture, and therefore, to create
that.
It is important,
then, to have in your consciousness a picture of the final
positive result that you are working toward, as a reminder
of your goal. When you are receiving a healing, optimally
it should be with the expectancy of being healed. At the
very least, it must not be with disbelief and resistance,
which stop the process.
You do not have to
believe in the method or system, but you must remain open to
the possibility of it working for you. If you do believe in
the healing, then during the healing you can remind yourself
that your healing is happening now. After the healing has
happened, you can see whether the results are partial or
total, so far. Sometimes, the full effects of the healing
are immediately apparent, although often there are
continuing positive effects that manifest during the days or
weeks following the healing act.
When the healing is
total, and no symptoms are experienced, know that you are
healed, and just get on with the rest of your life. When
the full effects of the healing have not yet been
experienced, it is important to continue to remind yourself
that the healing has happened, and that the effects are on
the way. Rather than continuing to see yourself in your old
bubble, see yourself in your new bubble, the one you are
moving toward. See yourself healed, in the future.
In changing your
bubble, or moving from any one reality to any other, there
are three steps:
1. Decide what will be true in the new reality. Your Intensions
For example, you can
decide, “In the new reality, when the healing is complete,
the pain will be gone,” or “Reading will be easier,” or “The
tumor will be gone.”
2. Encourage the perception that it’s happening now.
While it’s true that
you are moving toward some goal in the future, and holding
the perception of success at some point in the future, the
process of reinforcement must happen in the present moment.
The idea is to examine your perceptions of what is happening
now, in the moment of experience. “The pain now is less
than it was before. The healing must be happening now,” or
“The letters I see are a bit clearer now than before,” or
“Perhaps the tumor is actually a bit smaller now. Anyway,
my consciousness feels more clear now, so I know that
something positive is happening.”
Positive thinking is
not self-deception. Even when there are highs and lows in
the experience of the symptoms, it’s important to see that
the lows are where the highs used to be, so that even on
your current worst days, you feel better than you used to
feel on your previous best days. In other words, even on
days when the symptoms are being experienced, it can be
noticed that they are not so severe as before (when that is
true), and you are thus able to hold a perception of a
positive direction.
The idea is to give
yourself reasons to believe in the process, while at the
same time, acknowledging what is true, on the physical
level. It is, after all, the measurement on the physical
level that shows the effects of the work being done in the
consciousness. Each improvement in the condition on the
physical level should be acknowledged, and owned, as
evidence that the healing is happening now.
If the conditions on
the physical level have been measured as continuing to
deteriorate, it must be clear that something has not been
working, so that steps can be taken to correct the
situation, and continue the healing process. Even this
necessary correction can be seen as part of the healing, and
in fact, it is. It brings the person one step closer to the
final result of being healed.
3. Decide and know that now, it’s true.
You continue the
encouragement process until you experience yourself
symptom-free. When that happens, you must consider the
possibility that you may never again experience that
symptom. When the pain is gone, it may be gone for good.
When you see clearly, you accept it as your new normal
state. When the healing is complete, you must see yourself
as healed, and in that way, we say that you own the healing.
You identify the state of consciousness you experience, and
your view of the world from that state of consciousness, as
normal and usual for you, even if it is your new normal way
of being.
If the symptom was
evidenced on the basis of medical tests, look forward to new
tests that show you as free of those symptoms. After all,
healed is healed, and on all levels. If the tests show
improvement, but not yet total results, know that you are
moving in a positive direction, and that there is still a
bit further to go. If you have been working on yourself,
continue, accepting the progress you have made thus far. If
you have been working with others healing you, you can know
that it was a partial healing, and that the next one can
take you further along, or be the one that is the last you
will ever need.
When you have the
feedback on the physical level that shows the effects of the
healing work you have been doing, accept it and trust it,
and when you have a clean bill of health, find other things
to do with your consciousness than correcting problems. Get
creative, and set goals, watching them manifest, creating
with the tools you have learned to use, a life in which you
are happy and fulfilled.
In fact, you may consider sharing your success story with others. Many healers and teachers of healing have started on this path through the necessity of healing themselves. Thus, when they share their stories, it is from their personal experience.
That was the way it
worked for me. Perhaps it can work that way for you, too.
Let everyone know that anything can be
healed.
(from
Anything Can Be Healed, by Martin Brofman, Ph.D.)
From the Magnussa Phoenix Yahoo Group
Magnussa_Phoenix@yahoogroups.com
Many BLESSINGS
Keth Luke, editor, Dr Light
and our Cosmic, ET, Earthly Crew