
©Anacoana 2008
I've read her books and this evening I've been listening to a CD with a lecture she gave explaing Intuitive Healing. excellent information for any health care person, or any one who wants to develope their intuition.
Ana
"A
wonderful contribution to the field of human consciousness. Dr.
Orloff's work is not only needed by the social mind in order to
understand the future of health care, but it is also a masterpiece of
educational data"
Caroline Myss, Ph.D.
author of Anatomy of the Spirit and Why People Don't Heal and How They Can
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TAKE THIS QUIZ: DO YOU HAVE POSITIVE ENERGY?
TAKE THIS QUIZ: ARE YOU INTUITIVE?
http://www.drjudithorloff.com/
Intuition plays an indispensable role in self-diagnosis, pain control,
immune response and recovery from acute and chronic illness. As you
nurture your intuitive healing capacity your body then provides the
energy needed to create holistic methodologies that assist you in
creating breakthroughs in anxiety, panic, depression, and other
emotional blockages. This approach can be a bridge between traditional
and complementary medicine.
Transforming the face of
psychiatry, Dr. Judith Orloff, an assistant clinical professor of
Psychiatry at UCLA, asserts that we are keepers of an innate intuitive
intelligence so perceptive that it can tell us how to emotionally and
physically heal. Yet intuition and spirituality are the very aspects of
our wisdom usually disenfranchised from traditional health care. Dr. Orloff, who comes from a family of
25 physicians, advocates "a democracy of healing," wherein every aspect
of our being is granted a vote in the search for total health. It is
our birthright, both as health-care givers and health-care recipients,
to achieve such emotional freedom and physical well-being. Dr. Orloff is accomplishing for
psychiatry what physicians like Dean Ornish and Mehmet Oz have done for
mainstream medicine%uFFFDshe is proving that the links between physical,
emotional, and spiritual health can%uFFFDt be ignored., Dr. Orloff has
spoken at medical schools, hospitals, the American Psychiatric
Association, Fortune Magazine%uFFFDs Most Powerful Women Summit, and
alternative and traditional health forums%uFFFDvenues where she presents
practical tools to doctors, patients, and everyday people. She
graduated USC School of Medicine and completed a four year psychiatric
residency program at UCLA. As a board-certified psychiatrist and
assistant professor of psychiatry at UCLA, Dr. Orloff blends intuition
with her traditional medical skills to enhance patient care. Her
struggles acknowledging and then finally embracing her intuition are
chronicled in Second Sight (Warner Books). Her second book, Dr. Judith Orloff's Guide to Intuitive Healing (Three Rivers Press) shows how breakthroughs in healing our body, emotions, and sexuality. Her latest book Positive Energy (Harmony Books) completes a trilogy of books around awakening intuition
and subtle energy. Positive Energy takes a probing look at the epidemic
of exhaustion in America and how we can reverse it using specific
strategies to build energy and combat draining people. Positive Energy
is a national and Los Angeles Times bestseller which as been translated
into 23 languages. Dr. Orloff%uFFFDs new book Emotional Freedom is being
published by Random House in March, 2009. Dr. Orloff begins talks by creating a
bond of warmth, trust and intimacy with participants, within which they
can hear and explore her ideas. Her sincerity, humor, and joy bring
everyone in the audience with her%uFFFDleaving everyone more in touch with
their own intuitive abilities, as well as Dr. Orloff's contributions to
a radically new kind of medicine.
Dr.
Orloff voices the message that intuition works as a potent therapeutic
force that can help us lead smarter, saner lives. She is a serene
maverick.%uFFFD

Read
more about Dr Orloff's book Positive Energy
-
USA Today
Judith Orloff, MD
At an early age, Judith Orloff realized she had intuitive capacities, and is now integrating these talents with traditional medicine. ...
talentdevelop.com/interviews/JOrloff.html
Judith Orloff - Healthworld Online - HealthWorld Online
Judith Orloff, M.D. is psychiatrist, energy and intuition expert, ... Dr. Judith Orloff invites you to join her for a special year-long series of free video ...
www.healthy.net/scr/bio.asp?Id=124 - 69k
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Creative
Ways to Transform Challenges:
Loving
and Nurturing Yourself
Protect Your Energy From Energy Vampires An Interview with Judith Orloff, M.D. by Alissa M. Lukara
ALISSA LUKARA: In your new book, Positive Energy: 10 Extraordinary Prescriptions for Transforming Fatigue, Stress & Fear into Vibrance, Strength & Love, you mention Energy Psychiatry and the importance of a positive energy program in one’s life. Tell me about that.
JUDITH ORLOFF, M.D.: The reason I wrote Positive Energy is because there is an epidemic of exhaustion in America and probably the world. People are walking around tired and depressed and not questioning these states as anything but normal. I wrote the book to say you must question them, and here are some strategies to improve your energy. In the book, I talk about Energy psychiatry, which is the form I practice. It integrates traditional medicine with spirituality, awareness of subtle energy and intuition. I came from a traditional background. I trained at UCLA and did my residency there. It was all biologically oriented, meaning they believed that human behavior is a reflection of our biochemistry alone. I was taught to give out medications. I was never taught about subtle energy that’s related to human behavior or intuition or spirituality. I think that psychiatry is in the dark ages, and we need a new kind of psychiatry that incorporates all the other aspects with it. That’s what Energy Psychiatry is.
ALISSA: I agree. The psychological work I did with counselors only went so far. Adding work that incorporated energy and spirituality deepened the healing.
JUDITH: Exactly. I get so many calls. I have about 5000 people on a waiting list for my private practice. But I don’t have an assistant, so I talk to people who say the same thing you just did. I’ve been in therapy and did good emotional and intellectual work. Now I want to go to another level. It’s a mass experience. It’s so common that people are looking for more.
ALISSA: In my own instance, the emotional work alone took me to a certain place, but I hadn’t really “gotten it.” The work felt incomplete. Adding energy work and spiritual work was so powerful.
http://www.lifechallenges.org/create/drjudithorloff.html continues....
http://www.drjudithorloff.com/
3 comments on Great Information for Healthcare Workers and all of us
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Ana, I believe that painting is yours.. (?) It's beautiful!!
gab ~
I join you in praise of positivity and intuition, which are my true guides.
I've just finished checking out the addresses/links...I even took the two quizzes. Did you take/do them? I did a little better than I thought in the positive energy one (although a couple of my answers should have been "sometimes" instead of yes or no). I am at that half-way sort of location according to the intuitive one. As I was taking the quiz, I thought I was doing really badly, but I learned that I'm not and I'm sort of comfortable with the end result...I can take that and feel ok and positive about it.
I have seen Orloff on TV, so I am a little familiar with her. She always gives off the positive energy "feel" whenever I see her, so she has a natural way of drawing in attention to what she is saying.
I can almost say the same thing as what Orloff and Lukara refer to because I have been in therapy and felt raised to a level that I needed, appreciated, and learned from so much. That has sustained me so well since, yet I have felt that I was "brought up so high and then left at what I assume to be the maximum?" It's like, "hey, this is really good but is there anything else?"
I don't want to sound like a procrastinator (which I can be) or an excuse maker (which I can be), but I know I wouldn't do Orloff or her books any justice if I were to read (or attempt to read) them now. The immediate distractions alone wouldn't allow me to focus on something that I really should be paying attention to. I can't say this for sure, of course, but with Edie going back to work after a week's vacation, the 4th of July holiday being over so that things quiet down activity-wise around here, and I get a little more "back in the groove" in a time-wise manner of speaking, I might be able to take more time for me and some of the things I want to do for me. So, I am keeping this post as a reference for when that day does come, which I hope will work out to be sooner than later. I've found myself at a loss for time to read (for any and all reasons one would read) and I want to have that reading for learning and for enjoyment again, as well as time for other things I've put on the back burner.