Bruce Lipton and Physician Health Thyself

Edward Petty with Bruce Lipton, PhD GoalDriven.com petty Michel and associates

Edward Petty with Bruce Lipton, PhD – GoalDriven.com – Petty Michel and Associates

Why doctors should stay Innately positive and healthy

Chiropractic is more than a mechanical act to improve a patient’s health.

I remember years ago attending a Parker seminar when Dr. Jimmy was still alive and seeing a large drawing describing “Innate to Innate.” A concept I believe he may have learned from Thurmond Fleet who developed Concept Therapy.

Bruce Lipton, PhD, is a cellular biologist, has taught at University Wisconsin Medical school, at Stanford, as well as Life Chiropractic College West. I have heard him speak on several occasions, read his books (Biology of Belief) and consulted with him personally about my book (The Goal Driven Business.)

I think Dr. Lipton expresses the concept of Innate scientifically:

There’s a concept in quantum physics called “entanglement,” which is when one energy source entangles with another so that they interfere with each other. This interference can be positive and harmonious, as with energy healing, or it can be negative.

Physicist Amit Goswami published an article in a physics journal showing that entanglement affects people. He had two people meditate together and then separated them into two chambers where they couldn’t see or hear one another. When one person had a light strobed by his eye, it caused the firing of a certain frequency in the brain. Remarkably, at the same moment, the other person’s brain also fired, even though he never saw the light. This proves what we intuitively knew, that the energies of people can affect one another.

What Goswami’s study demonstrated is that when two people become entangled, one person will conform to the energy of the other person. When one of them is a healer whose cells are vibrating at a higher level, the client’s cells become entangled, and their energy is lifted. That’s why that old saying, “physician heal thyself,” is so important, even though most don’t understand it: If the physician’s energy is going to influence or, in scientific terms, “entrain” the patient’s, the doctor’s must be higher. (source on blog)

I have seen examples of this in many of my office visits over the years. You might have an interesting discussion with your staff at a team meeting about how the “vibes” of the office affect the patients.

Has anyone pulled a patient file and the patient suddenly called? Have you ever had a great team meeting the phones start to ring? Have you seen a patient improve just because you felt connected to them?

So, please stay healthy and stay positive, in alignment with your greater purposes and greater powers.

And pass it on.

😊

Ed

Lipton: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/healing-over-the-phone_b_1011510

 

PTC and the Subtle Art of Being There

It was in the 80s at a Parker Seminar, which was in Reno that year, that I first heard the term.

In the opening session, Dr. Jimmy Parker talked about PTC. I was attending as a guest with a chiropractor who introduced me to chiropractic. What an introduction!

Dr. Parker explained that PTC stood for Present Time Consciousness. (Parker had quite a few of these abbreviations!) He explained that a doctor could deliver a much better adjustment if their attention on the patient were in the present time, not thinking about past issues or on future concerns.

I have come to learn that this is a vital but easily overlooked skill.

You can tell when someone is 100% paying attention to you, or maybe not quite, or maybe not at all. And this makes all the difference in the patient’s trust in you, how long they stay with you, and whether they refer others to you.

But maintaining PTC can be challenging in a high-volume chiropractic office or any health office. How many thousands of adjustments does it take until all patients start blending into to one?

A doctor who worked with Clarence Gonstead told me about one evening when he was shadowing Dr. Gonstead. It was around 9 p.m., and the reception/waiting room was full. The doctor said to me that he exclaimed to Dr. Gonstead that his waiting room was still filled with patients. He said that Dr. Gonstead turned to him in the hallway before they went in with the next patient and said, emphatically, “No. I only have one patient, and that is the one I am with now.”

That sounds like he was present with each patient, and perhaps that is at least one reason he was so successful as a chiropractor.

I have seen more than a few techniques, or hacks, that help keep doctors, and support staff, in the present with each patient. For example

  • Completing the visit.  Some doctors soundly end each visit, often confidently saying, “That was a good adjustment, and I am satisfied.” Ending one visit before starting the next visit creates a micro-break, a little space between visits.
  • Break up the day. Different approaches to breaking up the day seem effective. For example, busy offices usually have varied but ritualized lunch breaks. These might include such activities as weight training or exercise, marketing, team workshops, lunch with the spouse, guitar practice, you name it. Mid-morning and mid-afternoon 5-minute breaks can also be helpful. (Stay away from social media!)
  • Remove distractions. You want to remove distractions that can pull your attention to future challenges or past mix-ups.  Pre-shift and short weekly meetings can be helpful in this regard by sorting out administrative issues so that you are free to focus on patients – in the present.
  • Cricket clicker! I remember one doctor telling me that he used a steel clicker, a “cricket clicker.” He would click the clicker just before the next patient visit, which would help him mentally begin the next visit.  (Whatever works!)

I suspect that this is a high-level technique. One for the masters. It can’t be canned. Perhaps it is beyond technique. When accomplished, when you are totally present, the patient innately feels that you are there for them and them alone, and this perhaps speeds their recovery.

I would be interested to know how you maintain Present Time Consciousness. You can add your thoughts here on our blog.

Staying engaged in the present for a better future!

Ed

The power for creating a better future is contained in the present moment:
You create a good future by creating a good present. (Eckhart Tolle)

Phyllis To Speak at Parker Seminars – Las Vegas

Phyllis has been on the Parker Seminar speaker circuit since before starting with PMA.  She presents a powerful presentation to motivate and inspire doctors and staff alike.

Coming to you from Las Vegas Nevada, February 23-25, 2017, Phyllis will be joining other colleagues in the chiropractic profession to bring a well rounded presentation of new patient procedures, billing and coding, obtaining referrals, handling objections, creating great patient experiences, and much more specifically designed for your Chiropractic Assistants.

Don’t miss out on this amazing lineup of CA Speakers:

  • Kathy Mills Change, MCS-P
  • Phyllis Frase Charrette
  • Becky Walter
  • Heidi Farrell
  • Holly Jensen
  • Brandi MacDonald

For more information or to register visit parkerseminars.com

or download the flier here: Parker Seminar Flier