Life on Florida’s West Coast

The Sedona Method

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I was a ticklish child. Wait, let me clarify. I was a VERY ticklish child. The thing is, I never really liked being tickled. Alas, my father adored tickling me and my sister. He loved to hear use giggle. I’m not sure how old I was when I just decided to not be ticklish anymore. Without knowing what mind over matter means, I employed the concept and taught myself to not be ticklish.

This is a very simplistic illustration, but I think it shows a lot about the power of our minds. We do not have to be at the mercy of a lack of self control and purposefulness. We, as humans, as so much stronger than we even know.

Techniques like the Sedona Method teach this same sort of mind over matter. The Method looks the illusion of “ego” and how it can get in the way of moving past old patterns of patterns of thinking, feeling and behaving. Letting go, or surrendering, is an important lesson everyone should learn. Whenever I think about the Sedona Method, I always remember Mariel Hemingway and her story of using the Method to move past her family’s tendency towards depression, so she could live life as a happier person.

My main interest in the Sedona Method lies in its repeated success in helping people release chronic pain, depression, anxiety, fatigue, and relationship issues. It’s the ultimate in self help. In fact, most of the teachers involved in the very popular law of attraction movement subscribe to the Method and its teachings, because they see how the Secret works with a New Earth by by Eckhart Tolle. In other words, we can get what we want and still let go of the “ego”.

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