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Getting The Right Type Of Help Is So Important:

  • Writer: Stacey Sellars
    Stacey Sellars
  • Jan 16
  • 4 min read

 



When it comes to mental, emotional, and physical healing, it’s so important that you get the right type of help, and the right practitioner for you.

 

Because I’ve spent my life working on healing my body, mind, and spirit, it’s something that I’m extremely passionate and knowledgeable about. It’s been a big journey to get to where I am today, and it is a continuous – ever evolving – journey.

 

Along the way, you could say that I’ve pretty much tried it all, and I’m usually one of the first to jump on new healing modalities and alternative therapies as they emerge. I learnt fairly quickly that conventional and mainstream medical methods are pretty bloody useless, especially if that’s all you are doing to try and heal. If mainstream methods truly worked, we wouldn’t have a totally overrun physical and mental health industry full of very unwell people.

 

But herein lies the problem: most people don’t know that there are other ways of healing. They think, “I’ll just go to the GP (Doctor)”, not realising that society has been deliberately programmed to put all of their faith and autonomy in the hands of someone who has been trained (indoctrinated) by the multi-billion-dollar Big Pharma sick-care industry.

 

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: Big Pharma’s business model relies on sick people. When we understand this, it becomes easy to understand why there has been such a huge marketing smear campaign against anything that is natural. It’s important to remember that anything natural cannot be patented — meaning Big Pharma cannot profit from it in the same way they can from synthetic, man-made substances. Mmm… now do you smell a rat?

 


Unfortunately, due to this smear campaign against anything natural or not “scientifically proven”, people have become afraid of what nature has to offer, including natural healing modalities that have existed long before mainstream medicine ever did. It’s such an odd paradox to me that people truly believe natural therapies are bad or harmful, yet products made from petroleum and toxic chemicals are somehow considered good for them. It’s also odd to me to put so much faith in science, when scientific evidence is constantly proven wrong as years go by. Science is observational, not factual. Studies are highly open to manipulation. It all depends on which variables the study chooses to include, who is funding the study, and what serves their best interests.

 

I remember reading about a study that proved something 100 per cent one way, then the exact same study was repeated with only slight changes — and the findings proved 100 per cent the opposite way. Please also note this quote from Dr Richard Horton, Editor-in-Chief of The Lancet (one of the most revered medical journals) for over 25 years:

 

“The case against science is straightforward: much of the scientific literature, perhaps half, may simply be untrue. Afflicted by studies with small sample sizes, tiny effects, invalid exploratory analyses, and flagrant conflicts of interest, together with an obsession for pursuing fashionable trends of dubious importance… science has taken a turn towards darkness.” 

This is why I don’t particularly put much weight into scientific evidence or what Big Pharma salesmen (Doctors) have to say. I prefer to make my own health decisions, research and try different approaches to healing for myself, and observe what happens within my own body and environment — and I implore you to do the same. No man in a white coat has the right to tell anyone that their personal experiences of healing are wrong or imagined because their agenda driven "science" says so!

 

You don’t have to give your autonomy away to someone outside of yourself. At the end of the day, your health and healing are your responsibility. Only you can truly know what is best for you. If that’s mainstream medicine, then great. But if you’re not actually getting better, why wouldn’t you explore other options — or even combine mainstream and alternative approaches?

I always find it interesting how many people are too scared to try something alternative, even when there is clear evidence that it’s achieving better results than anything mainstream. That’s cognitive dissonance at its finest, and it shows just how powerful the Big Pharma smear campaign has been.

 

Another problem I often see is someone who does get game enough to try something alternative often picks the wrong type of modality to begin with, or the wrong practitioner for them. Sometimes it’s not the modality that’s the problem, but rather the individual practitioner isn’t the right fit. This is where it’s so important to try a few different practitioners before you give up on the modality itself.

 

Navigating the world of alternative medicine and therapies is a bit of a game of trial and error. Persistence really is key, as is remembering that true healing takes time. It’s not like western medicine where you pop a pill and feel instant relief. True healing doesn’t suppress symptoms like that. In fact, sometimes symptoms can get worse before they get better, because alternative therapies are about releasing the root cause, not masking symptoms.

 

Anyway, whether you agree with what I’m saying or not doesn’t really matter. All I ask is that you try to keep an open mind, and maybe even allow yourself to get a little curious. If the current approach isn’t working for you, then perhaps it’s time to get a little brave, step outside of what you’ve been told is the truth, and start exploring other options for yourself.

 

You are allowed to think for yourself.

You are allowed to question authority.

And you are allowed to have personal autonomy over your own health.

 

As Albert Einstein once said:

“Doing the same thing over and over, yet expecting different results, is the definition of insanity.”

 
 
 

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