Healing Parkinson’s Disease Without a Placebo or DrugMichelle’s old self: Michelle is
in hers and was diagnosed withParkinson’s disease in 2011, after she noticed progressive involuntary shaking of her left arm, left hand, and left foot. In November 2012, she became a patient at Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix. Her attending physician told her that she’d probably had Parkinson’s for 10 to years already and that she’d have to live with the symptoms. Her plan was to cope with the progression of the bodily limitations as she aged.
She began taking Azilect (rasagiline mesylate), a medication used for
Parkinson’s disease that stops the uptake of dopamine at the receptor-site level, slowing its breakdown in the body. The drug produced very few noticeable changes.
Michelle became a student in November 2012. The month of December was outstanding. Her daily meditation routine brought
a feeling of peace and joy, which began to reduce her symptoms to a noticeable degree.
Michelle was certain that this course of action would assist her in overcoming Parkinson’s.
She continued experiencing great meditation sessions through early
February 2013. In mid-February, however, Michelle’s mother was admitted to intensive care in Sarasota, Florida, so Michelle flew to
Florida to be with her. The day Michelle flew back to Arizona for our
February 2013 workshop, her mother was placed in hospice care.
Michelle’s plane landed in Phoenix about an hour and a half before her
first brain scan. Needless to say, she was both physically and emotionally exhausted at the time of the brain scan, which indeed showed the extreme stress she was experiencing.
By the end of that workshop, she was certainly in a calmer,
more positive state of being, with barely noticeable Parkinson’s symptoms.
Following the workshop, Michelle returned to Florida to be with her mother again. Although she and her mother always had a difficult relationship, as a result of here orts in the workshop, Michelle felt sufficiently strengthened to be supportive, loving, and totally free of any old issues that could have interfered with the love she felt for her mother.
Nevertheless, because of her mother’s
illness and eventual passing, as well as her sister in Texas having a major stroke, Michelle was forced toy back and forth to Florida and Texas to deal with her family challenges.
Her routine was greatly affected, and by June, she stopped doing her meditations. Life had gotten in the way, and she had too many responsibilities. Stopping her meditations was like stopping taking the placebo. When she noticed her symptoms returning,
she started233
meditating again and made significant strides.
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