Oct
30
2009
3

What’s Your Personality? The personality and Physical Weak Sites

Research confirms that there is direct connection between personality, the human energy system, and wellness.

It not only substantiates what research has revealed about how person’s mental state influences their  susceptibility toward illness, it has  also identified that each personality type has it’s own specific “weak site” within physical body.
In fact, there are relatively specific personality traits that predispose a person to the creation of specific diseases, such as high blood pressure, heart disease, cancer, asthma, tuberculosis, autoimmune disorders and neurological diseases, as well as chronic related diseases.
By understanding personality type and its associated physiological functioning we can begin to understand the patterns of behavior that create illness.
What is find  that each personality type’s week site appears to be more sensitive to chemical imbalance than any other part of the body.
Example:
 
Betty - Age 25
 
Betty was not able to rid herself from back problem. She experienced it for her entire life.
She was a constant patient of chiropractic, after adjustment, couple of days later she ended where she started from.
It was later revealed that she was caretaker and worrier. Her energy system revealed that her personality weak site was her lower abdomen and lowerback.
Her caretaking patterns of behavior consistently drove her to want to care for the emotional neediness of of people, which in turn burdened her, and she felt as if she were carrying everyone of her back.
She also worried about everything. In fact, worrying became such a habit that there times when she didn’t even know what she was worried about.
All of her behavioral patterns associated with her personality type put her at risk for creating some kind of illness in he week site.
Her body finally reached a state physically and energetically where it could not carry any more and ended up[ creating chronic problems.
 
Carol Ritberger, Ph.D.

 

 
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Those weak sites are determined by physiological and emotional patterns created by a person’s inherent personality traits.

 
Written by jsosensky in: Uncategorized |
Oct
29
2009
1

Mind-Body Connection

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Edgar Cayce stated, “The spirits is life. Mind is the builder. Physical is result.”
Cayce, like many others believe that what we think is what our body generally becomes. What we have learned  is that the mind is the controller of all behavioral and physical functioning, and that the power of the mind can intentionally or unintentionally affect both the energy body and the physical body.
In other words, we can make ourselves healthy or sick through our thoughts and our emotional reactions to those thoughts.
 
What has been discovered through comprehensive studies is that our thoughts and emotions are intertwined, and both play significant role in development of a disease.
If out thoughts are charged with positive energy, then we are emotionally optimistic about life, and we experience an overall sense of well being.

 

If our thought are negatively charged, then we rob the physical body of the energy it needs to maintain balance. Negative thoughts provoke negative emotions: fear, anger, frustration, worry, resentment, and guilt-all of which have an undesirable and potent effect on our ability to fight off disease and infection. Negative thoughts wear down both the energy system and the immune system, leaving a person more susceptible to illness.

 

Those  same studies show that prolonged stress also wears down  both the energy body and consequently impacts why people become ill and why they do not heal.
Let’s say that people’s thoughts continually dwell on being sick and tired of their lives.

 

The electrochemical message sent from the brain to the body is that they are sick and tired.

 

If the thought is emotional and is strongly supported, then the body intensifies its reaction by feeling sick and tired. The stronger the thought, the stronger is chemical reaction, and the greater the chances for severe illness to occur.
 
In conclusion: Negativity wears down the immune system and leaves the body more susceptible to creation of disease. 
 
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Written by jsosensky in: Uncategorized |
Oct
28
2009
0

What is your personality?

In the 19th century, psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud developed his own detailed theory of personality. 

 
According to most of personality theories, we each have within our own personality type both strengths and weeknesses that are primarily determined by the generic neurological hard-wiring found within our inherent traits (strengths), the stronger and more confident we become, the stronger our sense of reality, the more control we have over our lives, and the better we’re equipped we are to make the choices that create the life and health we want.
 
If we function outside of our core traits and work from our underdeveloped psychological functions (weeknesses), then life looses its synchronicity.

 

We become energetically drained, mentally confused, and experience physical discomfort.

 

Our lives feel as if they are out of control, and we have a strong sense of being detached from life.

 

We feel emotionally numb, and our thinking becomes fuzzy. We become mentally immobilized and chemically out of balance.

 

These chemical imbalances create a flight-or-flight stress reaction in the physical body, and that stress response hinders our ability to think clearly to an even greater extent.

 

As a result, we find ourselves caught up in a vicious cycle of psychological and emotional behavioral patters that prevent us from getting where we want to go.

 

In the end, we leave ourselves vulnerable to the creation of illness.
 
(To be continued)

 
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Written by jsosensky in: Uncategorized |
Oct
27
2009
0

What personality are you?

 

Have you ever wondered why you instinctively do things?

 

Have you ever noticed how some people are easier to get along with than others?
 
Have you ever asked yourself why it is  that when you get stressed, the stress seems to show up in the same place in your body every time?
 
What is it that makes us different?
 
Eighteen years research of how personality, stress, and emotions contribute to the formation of disease in human body by Carol Ritberger, Ph.D. shows.

 

Personality, that’s what causes it. It creates the involuntary behavioral patters necessary for you to function and to survive, and represents both your inner generic coding and outward direction you will take in life.

 

Your personality is organizing principle that affects all aspects of your life: your lifestyle, your work habits, your relationships, your stress responses, and your health.
 
Personality represents the orderly arrangement of attitudes, beliefs, thoughts, emotional reactions, and coping mechanisms that help you deal with life.

 

Your personality is what establishes the boundaries through which you live your life. If life compliments your personality boundaries, then you will feel a sense of control over your destiny, and you feel happy.

 

However, if life’s challenges force you to move outside of your personality boundaries, then you experience stress and emotional discomfort and view life from a negative perspective.
 
Your personality has two aspects: traits and characteristics that determines the way your brain develops and functions around mental processing, which is how you gather and process information and make decisions.
 
There are four distinctive personality information which are categorized:
 
RED, ORANGE, YELLOW and GREEN.
 
Traits are part of personality that you cannot change, and the truth is, you don’t want to, because it is your traits that determine your personality strengths and your natural talents.
 
The second aspect of personality is characteristics.
Characteristics are the behavioral patterns that you develop as a result of what you have learned.

 

Characteristics are responsible for the formation of your learned habits, your comfort zones, and the idiosyncratic patters of behavior you create over the course of your life.

 

Characteristics are flexible part of personality that allow you to survive and adapt.

 

In a next several days we will be talking more about the concept of how personality affects more than relationships. It effects all aspects of your life, including health and well-being of your physical body.

 
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Written by jsosensky in: Uncategorized |
Oct
26
2009
0

Leadership For Life ( see Oct.21,22,23)

    7. Invest in Yourself

 
 
Remember the story about the Three little Pigs?
Straw, sticks and bricks were the materials they used to build their houses. The materials that went into each of those little houses directly influenced their capacity to withstand their forces of the Big Bad Wolf.

 

“Garbage in…Garbage out..” what you invest in yourself, is what you’ll get out of yourself…Sounds simple, doesn’t it? Imagine you were given a house to live in for free.

 

Upon getting your new residence you learn that it’s the last house you’ll ever have and it’s expected to last you for the rest of your life.

 

Would you invest in keeping this house sound?

 

How about it’s appearance? What if that residence was your body?

 

You need to live in it for the rest of your life.

 

What is your “spring cleaning ” agenda?

 

What are you constructing your foundation from, to ensure that it is sound?

 

We are product of the environment we create for ourselves. Some elements of that environment may be beyond our control, yet we can always control the development of our character. 

 

Ask yourself, “What can I do to start improving myself today?”

 

Take a closer look at the 7 Principles of Leadership for Life, and know while each principle holds on it’s own but when it’s applied in combination with each other, and applied in every aspect of your life, the possibilities are truly endless. 

 
 

Written by jsosensky in: Uncategorized |

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