
This is a clip from a recent @the.way.fwrd
podcast where guest @realrobwergin is telling a story about a woman diagnosed with an aggressive form of ALS.
Practitioners have a clinical responsibility to inform patients of the situation AS THEY SEE it according to their training, experience, research on the topic, etc. ..
This usually includes the following:
- Their assessment of what is happening
- Prognosis
- Treatment recommendations
What you do with that information and where you go from there is UP TO YOU!
You can get discouraged by what they shared, internalize beliefs about your body and what is required to heal, how long it will take, what it says about you as a person, etc. ..
Or you can say one or more of the following:
- “Thank you for letting me know.”
- “Challenge accepted.”
- “That works great. When can I start?”
- “I’ll think it over and may be in touch.”
You literally get to decide how to proceed on every front:
- Whether or not to address the concern.
- Your relationship to the information you were given.
- What percentage of your time/energy you allot towards the concern.
- Which practitioners to work with (if any).
- Who you share your health experiences with (friends/family).
There are no right or wrong answers, and it all comes down to what you decide you want and need and how to go about getting it.
What experience do you want?
Our bodies are amazing and in a single instant – a miracle moment- something can click for them and they can decide they’re done with a certain pattern and that they’re ready to show up in a different way.
Thank God for practitioners that are staying curious and forever learning new things. ..that aren’t afraid to tell what they know AND delight in being proven “wrong” when our bodies, hearts, and minds exceed what we previously thought was possible 🙌 ✨️
🧠🫀🫁