ENERGY NUTRITION

JANUARY 24, 2010.  This is another in a series of articles on the nutritional detective work of Laura Thompson.

My wife, Laura, owns The Southern California Institute of Clinical Nutrition.  She works with many patients by telephone.

Implicit in everything Laura does for patients is ENERGY—increasing it, awakening it, expanding it, making it more available on many levels.  After all, this is what people want—more positive and sustained energy they can rely on as they work toward the objectives that excite them.  They want to feel they have a large and buoyant reservoir of forward-looking energy that will sustain them through thick and thin.    

In order to achieve that, several areas need to be addressed.

Here is a Q&A with Laura on the subject:

Q:  When do nutritional programs fail in providing more energy?

 A:  There are two basic reasons for that.  The energy might be delivered in a form that produces an upsurge and then a let-down.  That would be useless.

 Q:  Give me an example of that.

 A:  A person takes an herb because he’s heard or read that it gives energy.  And it does.  But only for a short time.  The other reason is more interesting. 

 Q:  What’s that?

A:  Underlying situations in the body won’t permit the energy to “take hold.”  It drains away.  It fades.  As quickly as you replenish energy, it dissipates.

 Q:  And these underlying situations are?

 A:  This is where the detective work comes in.  Suppose the person has immune-system weakness.  That would, in a sense, capture energy and try to use it to fight battles it isn’t suited for.  The person would experience this “capture” as fatigue or exhaustion.

 Q:  So you would need to shore up the immune system.

 A:  Yes.  Correct nutrients delivered together can help greatly.  Then there are hormone imbalances.

 Q:  We discussed that in a previous interview.

 A:  Right. You see, if the hormones are not in balance and the levels are insufficient, you are going to run out of energy.  Because hormones are intimately involved with energy production.  The adrenal glands are an obvious example.  You can feed all the fuel you want to, to an engine, but if the engine is firing on two cylinders rather than eight, it’s not going to work.

 Q:  What about brain function?

 A:  We do neurotransmitter tests on patients.  The tests tell us about the levels of these chemicals in the body, and we can then achieve a good neurotransmitter balance with proper nutrients.  Cognitive processes are a key to energy.  If your thoughts are slowed down and become fuzzy, you can’t utilize energy.  With good neurotransmitter levels, your thought processes become sharper.

 Q:  And, of course, there is digestive function.

 A:  This is greatly overlooked.  Everything that happens in the digestive tract has to do with the eventual production of energy.  When necessary, I devote a lot of attention to bringing digestive function into a good range.  It’s absolutely vital.  The body processes food so it can deliver energy.  That has to happen smoothly and effectively.

 Q:  From all of this, I can see why the society runs on stimulants.

 A:  Of course.  You can try to substitute one kind of stimulant after another for the energy you should naturally have, but it won’t work.  You need to deal with and correct the situations that are weakening the foundations.  Good nutrition can do that.  But good nutrition isn’t just walking into a health-food store and grabbing a product off the shelf.  It’s much more sophisticated.  You need to go much deeper.  That’s what I’ve learned in the last 14 years.  You have to explore situations with each patient, and each patient is different and unique in important ways.  I recognize that.

(If you’re interested in becoming a client, contact Laura’s clinic at 800-608-5602.)

JON RAPPOPORT
www.nomorefakenews.com

WHAT BLOCKS CREATIVE POWER?

JANUARY 22, 2010.  This is the third article in a series about my coaching/consulting work with private clients. 

In that work, I find that blocks to creative power are the single most important issue.

There is nothing more important.

As a very rough analogy, consider a painter who goes into his studio, sits in front of the blank canvas, and can’t put paint on it.  He just sits there.

Or, he comes in and he sits down and he starts to paint.

It’s that black and white.  He either paints or he doesn’t. 

After 15 years of working with clients, I’ve come to the following conclusion: ultimately, the person knows what is blocking him.

He may not be able to articulate it at first, and the answer may be buried under pounds of thoughts and ideas, but the answer is there.

He can find it.

With enough dialogue, I’ve discovered the answer comes.

And it is surrounded with debris from education, family life, and other indoctrination.  That indoctrination is really a pile of distraction from CREATING WITH POWER.  It’s a diversion, like a candy counter can be a distraction to a person who is seeking to lose weight and eat healthy.

In other words, all our lives we are taught to veer away from creative power and do something else.  The “something else” becomes a habit, a reflex.  We become used to doing all sorts of things, none of which is creating with power.

It would be like this: you are taught to crawl; every time it occurs to you that you might want to stand up and walk, along comes someone with a lesson about crawling—how to crawl better, more effectively, more quickly, with more focus.  And THAT is a distraction, a diversion.

With enough diversions, you begin to believe that walking is a fantasy and it can’t really happen.  It was an aimless dream you once had, and it didn’t mean anything.

But it’s there.  Walking is there.

My work with private clients achieves several objectives.  It tilts the see-saw in the direction of the person’s true and powerful desire to be creative.  And with that desire operating, the person is able to do many things he once thought were beyond his grasp.

Two, my sessions with clients (all of which I do by telephone) teach and practice techniques that separate old mental habits from new imaginative exploration.  In other words, the person is no longer the victim of his old uncreative thought patterns.

Three, these techniques enlist the imagination to work, like a new engine, and turn out energy.  The person feels that energy and realizes he can live on a different and better level.

None of this work is dry and mechanical.  It’s all about being able to understand and sense the level at which the person is operating and bringing new imagination into that arena.  It’s a great adventure.     

JON RAPPOPORT

www.nomorefakenews.com

www.insolutions.info

(To contact me about becoming a private client: jonrappoport@nomorefakenews.com

IMAGINATION WORK WITH PRIVATE CLIENTS

JANUARY 21, 2010.  Many readers know my work as a medical reporter.  This work, which I’ve been engaged in for the past 25 years, dissects and describes fraud at every level of the medical cartel.

However, long before I became a reporter (1982), I was painting, and writing fiction and poetry.  With the great help of Bonnie Lange, head of the Truth Seeker, that work has expanded over the last ten years, and I have written many articles and delivered many lectures on the subject of imagination.

I also work with private clients, doing telephone sessions.  I call this Imagination Work.  It involves expanding creative power and freeing the imagination to improve health, well-being, and to achieve real goals in life. 

Imagination is a subject that fails to interest lots of people, because they think it is a toy that children use to fantasize about what never will be.

Why should anyone spend time talking or writing about imagination?  We live in an age of science, where progress is made by hard-headed researchers who build meticulously on the work of their predecessors.

How could imagination be a secret key to a more abundant and enlightening life?

And if it is, how can people access it?  Where is it?  In what closet does it hide?

How could imagination be a grand solution to the problems we face every day?  Isn’t it actually an escape from reality?

These are a few of the questions I’ve fielded over the years from people who study my work.

Imagination changed my life irrevocably 50 years ago.  I had been a student of philosophy, and after obtaining my degree, I realized that all my major questions remained unsolved.  In fact, studying what great thinkers wrote over the course of nine centuries had made matters worse.

Suddenly, I saw daylight, and I ran toward it.  Everything that had happened to me in my young life appeared as a prelude to making a grand leap…into imagination and the creative life.

I’ve never looked back. 

Since then, I’ve spoken with many people who work in diverse fields—the law, engineering, the arts, healing, teaching, office work, construction—and I’ve seen that those who are successful ALWAYS use imagination as their leading guide.  The rather amazing thing?  Most of them don’t realize it.        

In every field of endeavor, imagination wears the crown.  It throws off old habits and allows the seeker to create realities and solve problems that advance life in new and better directions.

Imagination operates according to abundance, in the sense that it is not limited by “what everyone accepts.”  And imagination expands.  It sees new possibilities where tradition only sees obstructions and roadblocks.

Like everyone else, I have often refused to explore these possibilities, preferring to remain in established channels.  But time and time again, I have been forced to realize that my own problems were being caused by my ingrained acceptance of a status quo. 

And then, I forged and jumped ahead.  Through imagination, I saw answers where, previously, there appeared to be none.

This, in fact, describes the kind of world we live in.  On one level, we feel we must circle around the same old ideas and practices—but we then recognize the world is full of “empty spaces” where new solutions can be enacted.

The New is always about imagination.

Imagination trumps all other cards.  It revels in new invention, new approach, and unexplored territory.  It enlightens.  In fact, imagination shatters the very notion of a problem and a matching solution.  It moves beyond that.  It elevates actions into innovative places where both the old problems and the old solutions give way to greater life.

It’s common to praise every scientific breakthrough as a structure built on the shoulders of the previous generation of researchers.

There is certainly merit and sense to this claim; however, there is also another factor, because in every breakthrough a person takes a leap.  In other words, the past doesn’t entirely dictate the future.

Edison and Tesla and Einstein weren’t inevitable.  For some people, that may be a hard pill to swallow, but it’s actually a glorious circumstance.

Einstein, in a sense, invented the universe the way he wanted it to be, and then found the mathematics to justify that invention.

Each one of us is standing on the threshold of his own imagination, and by taking the leap, something new is made manifest, where before there was nothing.

It is insufficient to say that the paintings of Cezanne were waiting to be made before the painter was born. I understand the merit of that statement, but in a larger sense, Cezanne made a leap of imagination.

He put something on the blank canvas.  Without his daring and creative action, the canvas would have remained empty, or would have been covered with the threads of the past.

The desire for the New is a kind of trigger that calls us. 

Often, a breakthrough is preceded by a period in which the inventor is grappling with a problem that resists solution.  Around and around he goes.  For a time, it was apparently that way with Tesla, the great physicist.  He was seeking to find new sources of energy, and in doing so, he was squeezing the scientific knowledge of the past like a piece of fruit.  But the juice that came forth was not enough.

So he took his great leap.  He engaged his own imagination and saw ways in which a whole new technology could not merely solve, but go beyond what was known and what was acceptable.

Too often we keep trying to tease out and solidify what we already know, when what we really need to do is invent something we don’t know.

This last may sound like a contradiction, but in fact it is what carries us into territory we’ve always longed for.  Territory we’ve glimpsed.

Imagination opens the gates to that place.

It’s the greatest adventure.  

In my work with private clients, I use techniques, exercises, and dialogue to open up this adventure and make imagination more available, more accessible.  This is a grand undertaking.  It is all about expanding life’s frontiers to explore new dimensions.

JON RAPPOPORT

www.nomorefakenews.com
www.insolutions.info

 (If you’re interested in becoming a private client, email me at jonrappoport@nomorefakenews.com and write “Jon Rappoport consulting” in the subject line.)