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New Beginnings: Dear Fibromyalgia/CFS sufferers Science is progressing at an ever increasing pace. Within the medical profession our understanding of, and treatment interventions for the fatigue spectrum conditions are improving on what is now, literally, a weekly basis. In this respect, I feel it is important to update my work alongside these developments such that all my customers and readers benefit from any updates and articles and further releases of my work. As a specialist in the field it is hugely important for me to try and remain objective and build a weight of evidence before lurching in one direction or the other and this has been my approach throughout the journey. In order to achieve best results I have to adhere strictly to my principles that every person is an individual and every single case presents with a multitude of differing factors for consideration. I have discussed at great length in my book that we now consider Fibromyalgia/CFS to be so much more than simply a disease, a virus, a bacteria as such. What it is, is a “condition” with a range of underlying causes all of which have combined to leave your body in a state of serious organic malaise. The reason that traditional medical practices consistently fail when treating this condition is because traditional health providers are trained to look for a single cause, a single factor, a single disease process that they can diagnose, pigeon hole and treat accordingly. Unfortunately for the tradionalists what is absolutely essential in the Fibromyalgia/CFS arena is a whole body holistic approach with all the body’s systems being tuned back to a state of health. Everything must be addressed in a logical and orderly pattern to regain wellbeing. Imagine the state of your car having been written off in an auto wreck. To get the car back on the road:- • Would it be sufficient to repair and reinflate the tyres if the brakes were damaged? • Would it be enough to reset the brakes, and repair the bodywork if the engine will not start? The answer is obviously…of course not!! The analogy may seem simplistic but it is in fact extremely relevant to your current situation. Recovery from fatigue spectrum syndromes requires total “buy in” and acceptance from the sufferer at the outset of treatment. I am going to make a statement which some may consider somewhat counterproductive. “In my work I have never claimed 100% recovery success for all patients, and I never will.” Anyone who makes such claims is guilty of peddling untruths and should be discarded as such. What I do claim is that for customers who “buy in” wholeheartedly to my treatment and commit themselves to the procedures i detail, they will get between 75% and 100% success. Those whose treatment protocol fails are those who are sceptical, are not committed to the process and do not adhere to the protocol. If this is you, then I must advise, please do not buy into my work, stay with your current protocol and your current provider, but bear one thing in mind when making this decision. “If you do the same things you cannot expect different results” If you are not committed to getting better then it is likely that you are not feeling ill enough to want this enough, and you are more likely to be suffering from a depressive condition brought on by lifestyle or genetic factors, or what I would describe as natural “lifecycle” events. Usually Fibromyalgia and CFS patients are people who previously were extremely active people who have fallen below a threshold that then becomes self perpetuating, and has lead them into their fatigue syndrome. They are usually people who will grasp an opportunity such as I am offering with both hands. A Model For Manual Intervention: What is required for recovery from Fibromyalgia/CFS, is to elevate the body, long term, to a level that it can resume normal function. To settle the body into a state that is above the threshold that allowed the sufferer to sink into illness. This requires a massive improvement in mitochondrial functionality whose failure is responsible for the core features of the condition. To start this process manual interventions are required to reduce toxicity and associated stress. After 5 years of research I have found all the factors necessary to achieve this, and have achieved a best fit protocol that is achieving results across the board for genuine cases of Fibromyalgia/CFS. I have created a flowchart of interventions that will address all possible causes of your condition. • So what is this flowchart? • How do we start the protocol? • What are the interventions? When I talk about interventions, in many respects I mean “changes”. • Changes to your lifestyle, • Changing the way you do, • Changing the way you move, • Changing what you eat, • Changing the products that you use and consume. In many ways these activities define us and “letting go” can even feel like changing who we are. But it is all achievable. Answer the following three basic questions? 1. Are you willing to commit? 2. Are you able to commit? 3. Are you prepared to make these changes and sacrifices in order to start the journey back to health? If you have genuine Fibromyalgia and CFS then you will be screaming “yes, I want this” and you will commit whole heartedly to this process. Case Study: Patient Y, 39 Year old female office worker. I was having a conversation with a patient who claimed that she had stopped improving after 3 months of continual gains. I asked fervently whether something had changed in her lifestyle, was she eating or drinking differently, or doing something that she didn’t do before. She denied that anything had changed and that the protocol had simply stalled. After treatment, I happened to glance outside the office window only to see her lighting up a cigarette on her way to the car. On her subsequent visit I mentioned this and It turns out she had started smoking again due to marital problems. So obviously this poor woman was under massive marital stress and in response had returned to smoking, possibly the worst combination of events that could happen in terms of allowing the protocol to function, yet she was unable to associate these external activities with the increased toxicity that had lead the protocol gains to stall and she had failed to reveal this information to me in my assessment. Its interesting to note that even under these appalling circumstances the patient did not suffer full relapse to her pre-protocol state. This is the reason as I stated earlier that I will never claim 100% success. What a patient does in my absence is out of my control, as it will and always should be. What I have been doing lately is combining all the “Beat Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome” protocols together to provide rapid detoxification at the beginning of treatment. In Part 2 we investigate an extreme case study, before moving onto the neurological aspects of the conditions and intervention.
Article Source: http://www.bharatbhasha.net Article Url: http://www.bharatbhasha.net/health.php/97446 Article Added on Thursday, September 25, 2008 LD
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