Reflexology For The Spirit

spirituality of one's health

Make Time for Yourself, Reflexologists!

One of the really nice things about being a Reflexologist is that 25 sessions per week is considered to be a full time career.

Even with less than a full time client-partner load, it’s easy to lose sight of yourself and your personal needs as you  look after your client partners and their needs.

You can prevent this from happening if you pamper yourself regularly and make sure your own needs for time and space are met.

A reflexologist who  protects a bit of personal  time and space is a much better healer to his/her client partners.  Your life is just as important as those of your client-partners, family, friends.  Actually, an argument can be made that you are most important because all these people depend on you.

We all enter the healing arts wanting to be the best practitioner we can be.  Taking time for yourself is part of that mix.  Don’t  feel guilty about this.  You need rejuvenation and energizing as much as other practitioners, and at least as much as your client-partners.

Begin by claiming one of those 25 weekly sessions for yourself.  Make a weekly appointment  with another practitioner and receive a session.  This might be a good opportunity to get to know other practitioners by visiting a different professional   every week.

Throughout the week, there are other things you can do to maintain your rejuvenation and energy.

  1.  Script  a healing journal.
  2. Pamper yourself with relaxing baths.  Use candles, salts, essential oils.
  3. Read a book.
  4. Take a few moments  to enjoy a cool  fruit smoothie and a magazine.
  5. Exercise regularly.
  6. Pursue a hobby.
  7. Get yourself out in nature to enjoy the sounds, sights, textures, and smells without technology.

Finally, don’t take everything on your own shoulders all the time.

Thanks for reading this blog.

Please refer this article to your preferred social media network.

My book “A Healer’s Handbook” is now available through Amazon or my website http://www.thurmangreco.com.

Thanks, Thurman Greco

Oil. Oil. And More Oil!

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The next time you need to purchase olive oil, read the labels on the bottles, jars, and cans.  Don’t just grab the container that’s on sale or the one on the end cap or the one  with the prettiest label.

I recently did a study on olive oils.  I wanted this information for myself and to share with my client partners and you, my readers.  Boy, did my eyes get opened WIDE!

Most olive oils on grocery store shelves are imported.  The names on the labels evoke history, romance, travel to exotic places.  Stand in front of the olive oil display for a couple of minutes and your brain may even wander to  skin,  water and  summer moons:

Bertolli

Pompeiian

San Leandro

Filippo Berio

Taste Inspirations

Nature’s Place

DeCecco

Buonaturae

Spectrum

Olivari

Botticelli

l could go on and on.  The least inspiring labels were Rachel Ray, Spectrum, and Hannaford’s.

When you finish reading those labels, you’re going to probably be thinking more about travel than anything else.  Imported olive oils are mostly  a blend of oils from many different countries:

Argentina

Australia

Chile

Egypt

Greece

Italy

Morocco

Spain

Tunisia

Turkey

Uruguay

U.S.

The average label listed 5 countries for the oil of origin.  When an olive oil company blends so many oils from so many places, I feel that things  get confusing.  How can there be controls, health guidelines on a product coming from countries all over the world?  And, truth be known, there are no controls  on imported olive oil.  The blend may not even be olive oil.

Oliveri oil comes from Italy, Greece, Spain, Turkey, Tunisia, and Morocco.

Pompeiian oil claims to have oil in its bottles from Italy, Greece, Spain, Argentina, Tunisia, Turkey, Morocco, Chile, U.S., and Egypt.

The only olive oil I buy and trust is organic American Extra Virgin Olive Oil.   Olive oil is a food which can be therapeutic.  If I’m eating something partially because of its therapeutic qualities, I want to know that I’m getting what I pay for.  And, let’s face it, olive oil is not cheap.   I want it to be organic and I want it to be EVOO and I want it to be what the label says it is.

When I read the labels, I discovered that most of the companies with these romantic sounding names claimed to use oils from most every country.  There were some exceptions:

Pompeiian produces several different olive oils.  One is American and 1 is Portuguese.

Carapelli, DeCecco, and Buonaturae sell pure Italian olive oils.

Taste of Inspirations has an oil from Italy and an oil from Greece.

San Leandro’s oil comes from Spain.

As far as my research leads me, the only Sicilian olive oil comes from Trader Joe’s.

The principal oil used in my kitchen is organic  American Extra Virgin Olive Oil because medical experts believe that it is a good food to help prevent several diseases which I’m not interested in dealing with:

cancer

heart disease

high blood pressure

osteoporosis

rheumatoid arthritis.

There’s a method to this.  In order for your EVOO to be therapeutic, you need to use an EVOO regularly enough to consume about 2 large spoonfuls daily.  This means you’re going to cut out some less desirable oils.  An easy way to do this is to substitute olive oil for margarine,  butter, peanut oil.

Olive oil is a monounsaturated fat – a healthy dietary fat.

You may not even know it but your EVOO is a heavyweight in your kitchen.  It’s important on your reflexology table too.  When your client partner voices dietary health concerns, this is your opportunity to share the health benefit information.  One of the easiest ways to begin to eat healthy is to rely on American organic extra virgin olive oil.

ENJOY!

Bertolli Olive Oil

Pompeian Olive Oil

Olivari Olive Oil

Carapelli Olive Oil

Thanks for reading this blog/book.

Please refer this article to your preferred social media network.

Don’t forget to join the email list.

Thurman Greco

8 Ways to Get a Good Night’s Sleep

I estimate that one third of your client partners have problems sleeping.  Many of them have just given up on getting a good night’s sleep.  This is not a good thing because there are many things that a person can do to sleep well…every night, not just once in awhile.

A person who gets enough sleep looks and acts healthier because there is more energy available to do the things to get through the day successfully.  So, here are some suggestions that have proven to be successful.  Try them.  Share them.

  1.   Receive a reflexology session every week.  People who get reflexology regularly  tell me they sleep better.  This is important for practitioners, too.  I receive a session weekly.  It’s one of the most important things I do in life.
  2.   Reiki sessions are wonderful for sleep.  Do you teach Reiki?  Attune your clients to be reiki practitioners so they can give themselves sessions every night when they go to bed.  Sleep is sure to follow.  A well intentioned Reiki therapy session is better than a sleeping pill.
  3.   Have a regular sleep schedule so that you go to bed every night at the same time.  Schedule your evenings so that you plan on sleeping 7-8 hours every night.
  4. An hour before going to bed, turn off loud music, scary TV shows, and consciously wind down.
  5. Do you have a lot of things to do tomorrow?  Before you go to bed, make out a list of all the things you have to do tomorrow.  Then, put that list in another room and forget about it until tomorrow.
  6. Make your bedroom a sanctuary for sleep.  This means moving all the clutter and junk to another part of the house.  That includes the TV and anything else that is a sleep distraction.
  7. Take a look at your bedding.  When was the last time you bought pillows, sheets, blankets?  Does your mattress sag in the middle?  Are you sleeping in worn out sweat pants with holes?  It’s time to focus on sleep-inducing comfort.
  8. Get a pen and journal notebook.  Early in the evening, every evening, spend a few moments writing about one thing that you feel thankful for.

Thanks for reading this blog post.  I will be offering more sleep tips throughout the coming year.

The book “A Healer’s Handbook is available as an ebook on Amazon an d Nook.  The paper version is available on my website:  thurmangreco.com.  So far, the response to the book is very positive.

Thanks again.

Thurman Greco

 

 

9 Things Reflexologists Don’t Do – and 5 Things we Do

Brain Physical system

 

Cure – Reflexologists do not cure.  Instead, we promote healing, which can be a very

different thing, depending on the issue.

Patient – Reflexologists do  not have patients.  Physicians have patients.  We have client partners.  Some reflexologists have  clients.  But, whatever we have, we don’t have patients.

Recommend – We do not recommend.  Instead, we work feet.  We concentrate our energies on facilitating healing.

Advise – Reflexologists do not advise.  We support our client partners in their healing path.  Our work brings about homeostasis and synchronicity.

Examine – We do not examine.  We read feet or hands or ears.  .We notice where our findings are located.  We work the feet, hands, ears,  to bring about healing, homeostasis, and synchronicity.

Prescribe – We do not prescribe.  That’s for physicians and other medical professionals.  We rely on our hands and hearts to tell us what we find, to encourage healing, to facilitate homeostasis, to see synchronicity.

Dispense – We have nothing to dispense beyond the sessions we offer.

Diagnose – We do not diagnose.  Physicians assist us in our healing efforts when they offer a diagnosis.  This is important because it’s much easier to overcome a health issue if it has a name.

Administer – We do not administer anything.  Instead, we read feet, offer sessions.   Our noninvasive sessions have been offered to client partners for ages and ages.

Reflexology for the Spirit practitioners use our hands, brains, and hearts.

We do not need to over schedule our days to be successful.  Twenty-five appointments a week is a full time practice for a Reflexology for the Spirit practitioner.

We are not wedded to advertising.  Some of us don’t even have business cards.  Referrals work well for us.

Because Reflexology for the Spirit works well with other modalities, many of us also practice yoga, massage, Reiki therapy, flower remedies.  That means we are always growing, learning.

We honor our heritage.  Reflexology for the Spirit practitioners take our traditions back many, many years:

Our history takes us far back in time  with beginnings shrouded in mystery.  What we do know is that early references to reflexology can be found in China, India, Japan, Egypt, Greece, North Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, the Mediterranean, South American and North America.

Historians tell us that Egyptians practiced both hand and food reflexology as early as 2500 BC.  If you ever travel to Egypt, please visit the burial ground at Saqqara.  The Physician’s Tomb there has a famous wall painting showing two people receiving reflexology.

If you ever find yourself in Japan, be sure to visit the Medicine Teacher Temple in Nara.  There you’ll find a stone carving depicting the soles of Buddha’s feet in a carving dating to 790 AD.

In India, there are paintings of Vishnu, the Hindu god’s feet with symbols corresponding to several reflexology points.

Ayurveda is an ancient Indian form of medicine  becoming popular in our country.  Reflexology is incorporated in Ayurvedic medicine.

Reflexology has been recorded in ancient Chinese writings describing pressure being applied to fingers and thumbs.

From this glorious history and recent twentieth century trailblazers, we now have thousands of people practicing various kinds of reflexology throughout the world.

Reflexologists the world over work in tandem with physicians as our field moves toward integrative medicine in the twenty-first century.  Integrative medicine works to heal the total person:  the physical, mental, emotional, spiritual.

Reflexology has endured the test of time and is modern as tomorrow in the 21st !century.

Thank you for reading this blog.  It has been a long time since I’ve posted an article.  I have been working full time/overtime on the new book!  It’s happening!

Thurman Greco

Woodstock, New York

 

Progress of the Book

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The book is, at last, being edited!  Real book progress is being made.  I hope to get it to the publisher soon.  I plan to go over it one last time about mid July.

Thanks to everyone for your patience.

Please share this exciting news (for me,  anyway) with your favorite media network.

Thurman Greco

Woodstock, NY

 

Arthritis in the Feet

 

Page0001THE ISSUE – Arthritis in the feet definitely addresses  problems we experience as we move forward in life.  Arthritis also focuses on a personality living with judgmental attitudes.  Control is  an issue.

PHYSICAL CAUSES – There are many, many different types of arthritis.  Common risk factors include:

old age

overweight

ill-fitting shoes

traumatic injury

If your client partner wants to deal with this affliction  and to know his/her specific causes, s/he needs to see a rheumatologist for a diagnosis.  This is important.  A diagnosis always gives the client partner more power over the health issue.  Until a person has a name for the disease, it is more difficult to overcome the problems.

You also need a diagnosis because there are many different kinds of arthritis and you will treat the issue differently based on which type  your client partner suffers with.

SPIRITUAL ASPECTS – Where the arthritis attacks the foot reveals much about the involved Chakras.  For example, the first chakra would be affected with arthritis in the heel.

If it is in the right foot – your client partner is dealing with past issues.  The left foot focuses on the present.

HEALING – The reflexology your regular sessions offer cannot be overestimated.  Combine them with Reiki therapy and encourage your client partner to add a few extra reflexology  spa sessions.

A person suffering with arthritis needs nurturing so that releasing  the past becomes easier.  Forgiving is essential with arthritis, especially arthritis in the feet.

Nurturing offered by your reflexology sessions allows your client partner to appreciate the positive things which life offers.   Nurturing reflexology sessions will also help your client partner worry less about perceived limitations.  This will definitely lighten the load.

In addition to your reflexology and Reiki sessions, you may want to include an occasional guided meditation  focusing on changing direction in life with ease.

Thank you for reading this blog/book.

Please refer this article to your preferred social media networks.

Don’t forget to sign up for the email list.

Thurman Greco

Thank you Sangi for the beautiful art work.