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Join date: May 30, 2023
About
Zoe entered the field of healing due to the inability of the medical system to help her. Faced with futile attempts, she defied conventional medical norms. Giving up the licensed drugs, she embarked on an unknown journey. Out of her traumatic past, she built a new life - durable, joyful, and authentic. Zoe embraced life to the fullest and learned to build her own world. Her struggle taught her perseverance and the value of self-discovery. She understood her purpose: to guide others to empower themselves, using diverse techniques and the best therapeutic methods. Zoe's story demonstrates the transformative power of personal healing."
Posts (56)
Feb 15, 2026 ∙ 3 min
When the Body Remembers What the Mind Tries to Forget:Redefining Chronic Pain through Gravity, Trauma, and Release
In clinical practice, we often encounter a frustrating cycle familiar to both therapists and patients: a precise treatment brings clear relief-pain markers subside, range of motion improves, and inflammation decreases. Yet, after a variable period, the symptoms return. The lower back pain resurfaces, the cervical strain tightens again, or an unexplained muscular fatigue settles in. Israel Don , a researcher of fundamental physical conditions, describes this phenomenon eloquently: the issue...
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Feb 12, 2026 ∙ 3 min
Somatic Psychotherapy & Movement Rehabilitation
We know about somatic psychotherapy & Movement Rehabilitation that cues all too well-from gym classes, physiotherapy clinics, and perhaps even from childhood corrections: "Suck in your stomach," "Pull your shoulders back," "Straighten your spine." The prevailing assumption in our movement culture is that good posture is a project of management. We are led to believe that if we simply engage the right muscles, hold our bodies "correctly," and control every movement, pain will vanish, and the...
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Feb 11, 2026 ∙ 3 min
The Body's "White Noise": The Hidden Architecture of Daily Exhaustion
Subtitle: When fatigue is not metabolic, but organizational-a look at accumulated load, gravity, and holding patterns. At the end of a long workday, my patients often describe an elusive sensation. It is not "tiredness" in the classical sense of glycogen depletion, nor is it sharp pain that can be pinpointed. It is a state of Systemic Heaviness . A diffused sense of compression, breath that fails to fully inhabit the lungs, and a sensory dullness in the lower back and pelvic region. The...
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