healing

Free Holiday Sound Healing Event at Ellicottville Church Features Gongs, Singing Bowls by Rev. Suzy Woo

The power of prayer will be amplified using sound frequencies from gongs and singing bowls, causing a measurable, palpable healing effect at a cellular level. Science meets consciousness healing December 8th.




healing

Wuhan Dr. Lee's TCM Clinic: Embracing Thirty Years of Traditional Wisdom for Natural Healing in Modern Life

Wuhan Dr.Lee's TCM Clinic has launched a special 10% discount offer for ordering Diuretic and Anti-inflammatory Pill and Fuyan Pill this Christmas month.




healing

Renowned Angel Card Reader, Nancy Smith, Reveals Profound Healing and Divine Insights

Embarking on a Soulful Exploration, Nancy Smith, the esteemed angel card reader, unveils profound healing and akashic insights, paving the way for an enlightening spiritual quest.




healing

Healthcare Workers and Disease Sufferers are Schooled in the Science of Jesus' Miraculous Healing Power in a New Physics Report by Celebrity Doctor Leonard Horowitz

Solid Science Explains the "Bio-spiritual Dynamics" of "Therapeutic Touch," and How Faithful Loving Intention Conveys the "'LOVE 528' Frequency" of Restorative Energy




healing

'Healing Fit' activates endorphins to reduce stress of brain

HEALINGFIT combines TES with sound therapy to improve sleep quality and revitalize your life.




healing

National Gong Day, Summer Solstice Celebrated with Free Energy Healing and Sound Bath Event at Ellicottville Gazebo

Spiritual enthusiasts and gong fans are invited to celebrate the summer solstice by receiving an energetic cleanse and revitalizing energies during a special "Gongs in the Gazebo" event June 21 in downtown Ellicottville for #NationalDayOfTheGong.




healing

Marquis Who's Who Honors Audree Tara Sahota, BMsc, for Expertise in Leadership Development, Evolutionary Organizations, Human Consciousness and Energetic Healing

Audree Tara Sahota, BMsc, recognized as an expert in energetic healing, leadership and organizational change




healing

Healing Through Words: From Rupi Kaur to Amanda Lovelace, Meet the Poets Leading the Way, and Announcing Beth E. Aubut's Powerful New Poetry Collection Soul Sold

Why Readers of Rupi Kaur and Amanda Lovelace Will Love Soul Sold




healing

Author Wendell Holmes Shares His Journey of Sobriety and Healing in His Debut Book "Four Powerful Strategies To Heal From Trauma"

A Compassionate Companion for Navigating the Complexities of Trauma




healing

The Anguish Of Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) And The Path To Healing Addressed By Dr. Kixx Goldman, Author Of Bestselling Book, Speak From Your Heart And Be Heard

'Speak From Your Heart And Be Heard' contains fictionalized inspiring stories, based on real life and professional experience. The ebook version is a bestseller in the Single Author Short Stories category.




healing

Muscadines, Gloom, and the Healing Power of Sunshine

It’s hard to believe that I’ve been sending my thoughts out here into the void that is the world wide web for a full two decades. But, here I am. Today officially marks the 20th anniversary of this blog. When I wrote those first words, “Welcome to My Site,” all…




healing

Dead Cells Release Wound-Healing Signals

Inflammation is the body’s natural response to injury and infections.  It promotes healing through immune cell activation to target bacteria and



  • Cell & Molecular Biology

healing

Dead Cells Release Wound-Healing Signals

Inflammation is the body’s natural response to injury and infections.  It promotes healing through immune cell activation to target bacteria and






healing

We Built a Self-Healing System to Survive a Concurrency Bug at Netflix

Comments





healing

Spontaneous Healing (paperback)

Spontaneous Healing (paperback)




healing

Breathing: The Master Key to Self-Healing

Breathing: The Master Key to Self-Healing




healing

C'mon C'mon delivers a tender tale of healing driven by a never-better Joaquin Phoenix and newcomer Woody Norman

The work of Oscar-nominated writer-director Mike Mills (20th Century Women, Beginners) has always been grounded in an inescapable sense of empathy — for the world, the people who live in it, and the characters he crafts a film around…



  • Screen/Movie Reviews

healing

Angelina Jolie Finds Her Comeback as 'Broken Person' in New Film After Brad Pitt Split 'Very Healing

The 'Maleficent' actress explains she was drawn to her character in new thriller 'Those Who Wish Me Dead' because the woman is broken but manages to overcome it.




healing

Rest, Relationships and Healing (Lesson #7)

This week we will look at forgiveness and what it can do for restless human hearts. Without forgiveness, we remain victims. Forgiveness has more to do with ourselves than with the person or persons who have wronged us.




healing

The Healing Faith of the Centurion

This message is about spiritual and physical healing, how God can heal. God loves everyone equally.



  • Pastor Doug's Weekly Message

healing

Great Highway's Future / Healing Revolution / Remembering Barbara Dane

Today, the contested future of SF's Great Highway. Then, a community group that’s building trust for better health. And, we honor Barbara Dane’s life and revolutionary music.




healing

The Healing Faith of the Centurion

This message is about spiritual and physical healing, how God can heal. God loves everyone equally.



  • Pastor Doug's Weekly Message


healing

Evolution Healing Marks Stroke Awareness Day

The Evolution Healing Centre hosted a drop-in event on Friday [Oct 25] to mark the upcoming World Stroke Day on October 29. A spokesperson said, “The Evolution Healing Centre recently hosted a drop-in event on Friday, engaging the community in discussing stroke awareness and ongoing rehabilitation efforts. Led by senior physiotherapists, Dr. Kimberley Watkins and […]




healing

The Healing Process of Remorse and Self-Forgiveness * Wicca-Spirituality.com

 


Although often confused with guilt and shame, remorse is actually a much higher calibrating "emotion." It's the 21st Century alternative to feeling bad about yourself, and making others around you feel bad too.


It not only feels better and helps you move forward in your life, but it is healing for the Earth... and as we ride the 2012 Transition, Mother Earth needs all the help we can give her!


This article explains how it works, and why you are worthy of forgiveness.

 

Remorse is a method to heal yourself, and others, after making a mistake.


After all, anything that brings a feeling of remorse is a mistake -- just a mistake. Did you know that's the origin of the word "sin"? "Sin" was an archery term; it means missing the mark. That leaves a lot more possibility for positive growth, doesn't it!


So you don't need to berate yourself for eternity. There is nothing to berate yourself for if you didn't know any better, or if you did the best you could.


And I believe we always do the best we can, with what we have in the moment.


We're not perfect. Sometimes we do things we're not proud of. But, in the moment, that was undoubtedly the best that we could do.


Maybe you gave in to your meaner impulses. If you could have held yourself to a higher ideal in that moment, you would have done so. What would you have to gain, by not?


Maybe you didn't know how to do better. You can only work with what you know.


God does not expect you to know what you do not yet know!


For whatever reason -- fatigue, stress, anxiety, confusion, distraction, etc -- maybe you didn't do the best you hoped for. Maybe it wasn't as good as you could have done another day.


But you obviously did the best you could in that moment.


Why would anyone do less than that?


God doesn't need you to burn in hell for it, not even the hell of your own harsh thoughts. She only wants you to learn from the process, and to use it to grow. That's what remorse is all about.

 

There are four parts to the process of remorse.


The first part is a pang in your Heart. There is an energy there, call it an emotion if you like, that signals you are not happy with your actions.


From here, many people get derailed into guilt, instead of continuing the process of remorse.


The second part is the most important, the core of remorse...


You accept that you made a mistake. And you make an unemotional, practical assessment of your actions.


When your actions and choices don't live up to your ideals or ethics... you figure out how you could do better, discover what was moving in you (probably subconsciously) that caused that action, and -- here's the critical bit -- resolve to do better next time.

Remorse is calm and determined. Rather than destroying your self-respect, remorse enhances it. It provides you with the opportunity to grow, to live up to your ideals.


It recognises that within you there is a perfect being, capable of the best.


And that there is always another opportunity to try.


Contrast that with shame, which says that you are worthless and hopeless. There's just nowhere good to go, from there!


Remorse doesn't take the mistake personally. It sees an action as wrong, but not you as a person.


Remorse knows that people can't accurately, honestly be judged in terms of "wrong" and "bad."


The next step is always making amends. You must undo the error, to the best of your ability. And apologise, if it won't make things worse.


We must be clear -- this step has nothing to do with being forgiven by another person. Whether they forgive you or not is about them and their process, and is not about you.


To seek someone's forgiveness when they aren't ready to give it can be a further harm.


You fix the mistake if you can. That is the only purpose of this step.


Inherent in this process is self-forgiveness. You see a mistake, you acknowledge it, you figure out what went wrong, you fix it if you can, and you determine to not make that mistake again.


When you've done all that, forgiveness is a lot easier.


You can forgive yourself, because you know you aren't a bad person who intentionally did wrong... and because you are doing your best not to slip up that way in the future.


No one is perfect. No one is expected, by the Divine, not to make mistakes. On the contrary, that's often how we learn and grow.


That's all the Divine wants of you. Not perfection. But learning and growing from your slip-ups.


So you can accept that you did the best you were able to, at the time. And forgive yourself, for being human and humanly fallible.

 

If you get stuck in guilt, look for the underlying shame. Shame is like Velcro to guilt. It tells you that you deserve to feel terrible guilt, that you are not worthy of forgiveness or compassion or kindness.


But shame LIES.


You are worthy of forgiveness, because you are not a flawed person.You are Divinity tasting life as a mortal individual -- nothing else.


It doesn't matter what your family or coworkers or boss thinks of you. It doesn't matter how you've been treated by others -- that's nothing to do with YOU, that's all about the (human) blindness of others.


You are infinitely worthy and loveable!


And when others can't see that it's only because they haven't realised that they are infinitely worthy and loveable. When people get tied down, in their minds, into one little frail animal body and one small human life, all kinds of such misconceptions arise!


But it's not the truth.


The truth is that you are eternal -- learning and growing and polishing yourself on challenge after challenge, life after life.


The soul that is truly you is infinitely worthy and Divine. The body and mind you think of as you are only a costume that put on for a while, and then point aside, to go home for dinner and a bath, a good rest, to get up and come play again.


So how do you as a mere mortal forgive yourself?


The same way you forgive anyone... With compassion for your human frailty: you really are doing our best with what you have. With perspective: understanding that this life is a playground and schoolroom, and not the life-or-death struggle it seems. With determination to not make the same mistake again.


With Bright Blessings,




healing

Sound Healing and Mindfulness Meditation

Ever wanted to try a sound healing meditation? Come join GSG and CPS for a mindfulness hour, guided by a certified sound healer.




healing

Inside this maximum security prison, a film festival proves 'a little bit healing'

The Sing Sing maximum security prison in New York held its first-ever film festival recently, with incarcerated men invited to judge the five entries.




healing

India Abraham: Healing physical and psychological scars through medical tattooing


Jerusalemite of the week: India Abraham is a practitioner of medical tattooing who had already helped scores of people before Oct. 7, but her work has taken on even greater significance since then.




healing

Docosanoid signaling modulates corneal nerve regeneration: effect on tear secretion, wound healing, and neuropathic pain [Thematic Reviews]

The cornea is densely innervated, mainly by sensory nerves of the ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal ganglia (TG). These nerves  are important to maintain corneal homeostasis, and nerve damage can lead to a decrease in wound healing, an increase in corneal ulceration and dry eye disease (DED), and neuropathic pain. Pathologies, such as diabetes, aging, viral and bacterial infection, as well as  prolonged use of contact lenses and surgeries to correct vision can produce nerve damage. There are no effective therapies to alleviate DED (a multifunctional disease) and several clinical trials using -3 supplementation show unclear and sometimes negative results. Using animal models of corneal nerve damage, we show that treating corneas with pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF) plus docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) increases nerve regeneration, wound healing, and tear secretion. The mechanism involves the activation of a calcium-independent phospholipase A2 (iPLA2) that releases the incorporated DHA from phospholipids and enhances the synthesis of docosanoids neuroprotectin D1 (NPD1) and a new resolvin stereoisomer  RvD6i. NPD1 stimulates the synthesis of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), nerve growth factor (NGF), and of semaphorin 7A (Sema7A).  RvD6i treatment of injured corneas modulates gene expression in the TG resulting in enhanced neurogenesis; decreased neuropathic pain and increased sensitivity. Taken together, these results represent a promising therapeutic option to re-establish the homeostasis of the cornea.




healing

Healing the Wounds of the Vietnam War

Every Veterans Day, Jeremy Redmon thinks about his father, Donald Lee Redmon — an Air Force veteran who survived more than 300 combat missions over Southeast Asia, but who took his own life when Jeremy was 14. This year, Redmon traveled back to Hanoi with a group of former prisoners of war, many of whom had flown the same missions as his dad. Jeremy asked these veterans questions he was never able to ask his own father, about how they’d healed from the war and lived rewarding lives thereafter. In this episode, guest host Jennie Rothenberg Gritz speaks with Redmon about the complexities of the Vietnam War, as well as his own experiences as a reporter in Iraq. Then, Vietnamese American author Mai Elliott discusses her family’s experiences in North and South Vietnam, and how her feelings about the conflict changed throughout the 1960s. Read Jeremy Redmon’s Smithsonian story “Fifty Years After Their Release, Former Vietnam POWs Journey Back to Hanoi” here (https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/fifty-years-finding-freedom-vietnam-vets-healing-journey-hanoi-180983052/) . Order Mai Elliott’s book The Sacred Willow: Four Generations in the Life of a Vietnamese Family here (https://www.amazon.com/Sacred-Willow-Generations-Vietnamese-Family-ebook/dp/B074JBTTZ3?ref_=ast_author_mpb) . Find prior episodes of our show here (https://www.smithsonianmag.com/podcast/) . There’s More to That is a production of Smithsonian magazine and PRX Productions. From the magazine, our team is Jennie Rothenberg Gritz, Chris Klimek, Debra Rosenberg and Brian Wolly. From PRX, our team is Jessica Miller, Adriana Rosas Rivera, Genevieve Sponsler, Terence Bernardo, and Edwin Ochoa. The Executive Producer of PRX Productions is Jocelyn Gonzales. Fact-checking by Stephanie Abramson. Episode artwork by Emily Lankiewicz. Music by APM Music.




healing

Woman in Israel finds healing through godly counsel

No matter people’s struggles, the counselling ministry focuses on a right relationship with God as the beginning of the healing process.




healing

Bringing hope and healing to South Korea

From 21 July - 19 August, Logos Hope brought the hope of the Gospel to over 50,000 people who visited the ship in Incheon, South Korea.




healing

Of punctures, an epileptic, and healing

Cycling to reach people in remote villages in Malawi, Yolanda Mamvura experienced a puncture which led her to pray for an epileptic.




healing

Variety of healing prayer

As the women's team goes out to pray and encourage believers, a woman in hospital and a young man experience Him first hand.




healing

Healing through understanding

Teams help nominal Christian believers understand the truth of God's love for them so that they will worship Him instead of idols.




healing

OM lending a hand to start the healing

OM supported the Ukrainian Military Ministry in order to print trauma counselling books




healing

Healing and visions in the Arabian Peninsula

Muslim background believers in the Arabian Peninsula experience healing and visions in their journey to faith.




healing

Entrepreneur maps bold path for racial healing




healing

Tel Aviv Spirit Festival explores mindfulness, resilience, and healing from trauma


Spirit Film Festival brings films on resilience, spirituality, and healing to Tel Aviv.




healing

How the healing powers of botany can reduce anxiety and boost health

Surrounding ourselves with greenery can do wonders for our physical and mental wellbeing. Kathy Willis reveals just what kinds of plants are best for our brains and bodies, and why




healing

Swelling After Knee Injury May Hinder Healing

Title: Swelling After Knee Injury May Hinder Healing
Category: Health News
Created: 8/31/2007 12:00:00 AM
Last Editorial Review: 8/31/2007 12:00:00 AM




healing

How the healing powers of botany can reduce anxiety and boost health

Surrounding ourselves with greenery can do wonders for our physical and mental wellbeing. Kathy Willis reveals just what kinds of plants are best for our brains and bodies, and why




healing

Moss Agate: Meaning, Metaphysical Properties, and Healing Uses

Moss Agate meaning revolves around growth, emotional healing, and nature's balance. Discover its grounding energy and how it fosters abundance and inner peace.




healing

Apophyllite Crystal: Meaning, Healing Properties, and Benefits

Apophyllite: Discover the healing powers of apophyllite crystals, known for enhancing clarity, intuition, and spiritual growth. Perfect for meditation and relaxation.




healing

How the Brain Summons Deep Sleep to Speed Healing

A heart attack unleashes immune cells that stimulate neurons in the brain, leading to restorative slumber




healing

Magnetic Dressing Improves Diabetic Wound Healing

Researchers at the National University of Singapore have developed a magneto-responsive hydrogel wound dressing that also contains two different regenerative cell types. The hydrogel is also embedded with magnetic particles that can be stimulated using an external magnetic field. The action of the magnetic field on the gel-encapsulated particles causes mechanical stresses within the gel […]




healing

Electrical Stitches Speed Wound Healing in Rats



Surgical stitches that generate electricity can help wounds heal faster in rats, a new study from China finds.

In the body, electricity helps the heart beat, causes muscles to contract, and enables the body to communicate with the brain. Now scientists are increasingly using electricity to promote healing with so-called electroceuticals. These electrotherapies often seek to mimic the electrical signals the body naturally uses to help new cells migrate to wounds to support the healing process.

In the new study, researchers focused on sutures, which are used to close wounds and surgical incisions. Despite the way in which medical devices have evolved rapidly over the years, sutures are generally limited in capability, says Zhouquan Sun, a doctoral candidate at Donghua University in Shanghai. “This observation led us to explore integrating advanced therapeutics into sutures,” Sun says.

Prior work sought to enhance sutures by adding drugs or growth factors to the stitches. However, most of these drugs either had insignificant effects on healing, or triggered side-effects such as allergic reactions or nausea. Growth factors in sutures often degraded before they could have any effect, or failed to activate entirely.

The research team that created the new sutures previously developed fibers for electronics for nearly 10 years for applications such as sensors. “This is our first attempt to apply fiber electronics in the biomedical field,” says Chengyi Hou, a professor of materials science and engineering at Donghua University.

Making Electrical Sutures Work

The new sutures are roughly 500 microns wide, or about five times the width of the average human hair. Like typical sutures, the new stitches are biodegradable, avoiding the need for doctors to remove the stitches and potentially cause more damage to a wound.

Each suture is made of a magnesium filament core wrapped in poly(lactic-co-glycolic) acid (PLGA) nanofibers, a commercially available, inexpensive, biodegradable polymer used in sutures. The suture also includes an outer sheath made of polycaprolactone (PCL), a biodegradable polyester and another common suture material.

Previously, electrotherapy devices were often bulky and expensive, and required wires connected to an external battery. The new stitches are instead powered by the triboelectric effect, the most common cause of static electricity. When two different materials repeatedly touch and then separate—in the case of the new suture, its core and sheath—the surface of one material can steal electrons from the surface of the other. This is why rubbing feet on a carpet or a running a comb through hair can build up electric charge.

A common problem sutures face is how daily movements may cause strain that reduce their efficacy. The new stitches take advantage of these motions to help generate electricity that helps wounds heal.

The main obstacle the researchers had to surmount was developing a suture that was both thin and strong enough to serve in medicine. Over the course of nearly two years, they tinkered with the molecular weights of the polymers they used and refined their fiber spinning technology to reduce their suture’s diameter while maintaining strength, Sun says.

In lab experiments on rats, the sutures generated about 2.3 volts during normal exercise. The scientists found the new sutures could speed up wound healing by 50 percent over the course of 10 days compared to conventional sutures. They also significantly lowered bacteria levels even without the use of daily wound disinfectants, suggesting they could reduce the risk of post-operation infections.

“Future research may delve deeper into the molecular mechanisms of how electrical stimulation facilitated would healing,” says Hui Wang, a chief physician at Shanghai Sixth People’s Hospital.

Further tests are needed in clinical settings to assess how effective these sutures are in humans. If such experiments prove successful, “this bioabsorbable electrically stimulating suture could change how we treat injuries in the future,” Hou says.

The scientists detailed their findings online 8 October in the journal Nature Communications.