전립선-자위

Alternative Therapies

 prostate massage by conventional medicine

Alternative therapies such as prostate massage are not often appreciated by conventional medicine. (Many NAT therapy(TM) practitioners insist on the use of drug-free, skill-building interventions preferred by anatomical therapists in the treatment of traditional manual therapy.

This article looks at alternative therapies employing the body’s qualities as opposed to the scientific ones solely. First, we discuss the use of “Oral Medicine” as opposed to ” Western Medicine.” (This is not to say, “Western” medicine is worthless, but that conventional medicine is overpresciplined in inviting complementary approaches). Then, we look at some of the difficulties inherent in relying solely on ” Western” ( ie drug based ) medicine. Lastly, we suggest that “Oral Medicine” is a poor training ground for practitioners who hope to encourage a “multidimensional” approach to health care.

Oral Medicine/ Western Medicine relies heavily on the carrot of positive emotion to get us to take medicine and surgeries. Valuing and nurturing our emotional aspect has been central to Western medicine since the earliest days of Western medicine.

Today, however, despite much of Western ( ie drug based) medicine’s accomplishments, emotional well-being has not been humanity’s primary focus. Rather, pharmaceuticals and modern medicine increasingly incorporate a focus on symptom management rather than on well-being, treating the symptoms and dis-ease of the body.

This trend reverses the millennia-old paradigm of Eastern ( ie ancient medicine) medicine where infants were cruelly treated and mental deprivation was the route to mental stability. Eastern medicine is based on the idea that all aspects of the body are interconnected – breathing, eating, thinking, feeling, space, posture, etc. Therapy, therefore, is performed holistically and as an inter-connectedness, not an isolated function.

Moreover, Pharmaceuticals, unlike Eastern medicines, do not work in isolation. They work in conjunction with our body, mind, and spirit, as well as incorporating our spiritual health. This holistic perspective is a western aesthetic approach, rather than an Eastern testimonial approach.

While both modalities are well worth the study of both ideals, one for sure has to take the Western healing approach as a starting point, and the other for sure takes us further away from our true identity, our spirit, ourotheros Confidence, and our true purpose in life.

One of the great advantages of utilizing each to care for ourselves is obvious:

We can easily use the information from each to focus our therapy. In other words, we are not limited to what knowledge we gather from Western medicine. We can easily use our body-mind-spirit complex to meditate on what feels good without judgment. This is fantastic for Every one of us.

And we can easily apply the knowledge gained from each modality to complement our treatment. Each of us can use our personal experiences in life to complement our treatment.

Imagine being able to not only know your body but your spirit in such a way, that your very core being is drawn and drawn to working with your body and therefore healing itself – this is true freedom, the very breath of life.

And we can come even further than this! We can come to embrace all disciplines fighting at our edges, bursting at the seams with life to confront our existence. So this means getting into existence as free as possible, ever seeking to create the most sumptuous health possible for each of our body, mind, and spirit, ever ready to make the long leap from education to sugared arrogance.

And when we have finally got it all together – and this will be the case – then we can throw away the rug Doctorand learn to operate on our innate truths.

And to this end, I offer you a simple definition of “Healing” which can be stated in its simplest form: 전립선 자위

Knowing oneself as the authentic subjectiveineright; being aware of any outsourcing, and patting oneself off as the monster underneath the Sheet, can come too late.

And this definition would read like this:

Healing is based on the subjective, deep reading, the inner wisdom of one’s Self.

Therefore, we must read more than we can see or hear about. Rather, we must experience more than we can visualize. And this may require us to live in the body some of the time, letting our spirit be raised to the direct experience of what it feels like to be that which we are.