Category: Top » Health » Diseases-and-conditions »


Author: robertrodgers | Total views: 10 Comments: 0
Word Count: 611 Date: Wed, 16 Jan 2008 5:17 AM

It is Possible to Recover from Parkinson's Disease

What happens when you are diagnosed with Parkinson's disease? You are told there is good news and bad news.
The good news is that you will not die from Parkinson's anytime soon. The bad news is that you will get progressively worse each year.

John Coleman, a naturopath doctor from Australia, says the belief that anyone who has been diagnosed with Parkinson's will inevitably get worse is dead wrong. Why does he challenge this conventional "wisdom"?

John Coleman was diagnosed with Stage IV Parkinson's Disease in 1995. He had all the major symptoms of Parkinson's -
muscular rigidity
tremors
difficulty walking
frozen face
muscle weakness
insomnia
cognitive impairment
fatigue
illegible handwriting
poor coordination
freezing
spasms
gastric reflux
loss of libido

You name it. He had it. Three and a half years later John Coleman was symptom free.

John Coleman, ND, says if he can recover, anyone can recover. Over the past decade he has helped countless individuals in Australia find relief from the symptoms of Parkinson's disease. Some of his clients have now also fully recovered.

Is it easy to recover from Parkinson's? Certainly not.

John Coleman ND is the first to say there is no cure for Parkinson's. No magic "pill" exists that permanently relieves the symptoms of Parkinson's and ultimately "cures" the disease. If you are hoping for a magic bullet you might as well give up looking.

The good news is that recovery is possible. The body knows how to heal itself. It just needs a little help remembering how. Recovery evolves over time ever so gently as your body returns to hormonal balance and harmony.

John Coleman initially experimented with a variety of modalities to heal his own Parkinson's. He was so sick he was willing to try anything. Some of the therapies he pursued were not effective. Others did succeed in helping him get better.

What helped to relieve his symptoms? A variety of factors helped him recover. Their combined effect turned out to be powerful.

Exercise. The human body was built to be physically active. Use it or lose it.

Eat well to get well. Neurons need good nourishment to heal.

Hydrate cells. People with Parkinson's are chronically dehydrated. Dehydration contributes to constiptation.

Release trauma. John Coleman found that persons with Parkinson's have experienced high stress or trauma at some time during the first fifteen years of their life. The trauma and stress that is physically trapped in the cells and tissues needs to be released through energy healing, Bowen therapy or cranio sacral therapy or other bodywork modalities.

Laugh. Laughter manufactures the hormones the body desperately needs to maintain hormonal balance. Laughter does not cost anything. It is also fun.

Reduce exposure to toxins. Many people are not aware that many common household detergents and cleaning agents create neurological damage.

Meditate. Meditation lowers the level of hormones such as adrenaline. Hormones like adrenaline are a key hormone implicated in the onset of Parkinson's.

John Coleman has shown by his own example that relief from the symptoms of Parkinson's is possible. The miracle of full recovery is even possible.

The road to recovery is not quick or simple. There is no magic cure. Recovery requires understanding, time, and the will to get well.

Keep the faith. Begin taking care of your body. Give your body time to heal. Miracles do happen.

About the Author

Robert Rodgers Ph.D. believes that the body knows how to heal itself. Read information about how one man fully recovered from Parkinson's at parkinsonsrecovery.com




Rate, comment or bookmark this article

Seed Newsvine

Rating: Not yet rated

Bookmark this article in your preferred program
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Comments RSS

No comments posted.

Add Comment

Your Name:


Your Email:


Comment

Enter the code shown

Visual CAPTCHA



Popular Articles in this cathegory

1: How To Deal With Gum Abscess
When pus forms in your gums but not in the bone, you have gum or periodontal abscess. It ranks second in dental emergencies. It is the result of periodontitis, a severe gum disease. It usually needs t..

2: What Makes Hemorrhoids Itch?
Why do hemorrhoids itch and burn? What can you do to allieve the symptoms? External hemorrhoids are a bit easier to answer, after all they're quite near a sensitive band of nerves, but how do hemorrhoids that are inside the body cause itching and burning on the outside? Hemorrhoids as a whole cause these symptoms both directly, due to their very existence and behaviour, and indirectly through other biological reactions.

3: Electrolyte Imbalance: Signs and Symptoms of Hyperkalemia
Electrolyte imbalances within the body can occur in response to many factors. When a person is dehydrated either from sickness or starvation, their electrolytes can become depleted. Certain medications can cause electrolyte imbalances as well as chronic diseases such as diabetes and renal failure.

4: 10 Signs That You Might Have Yeast Infection
For genitalia and the digestive system, there is a white or whitish mucous discharge. In the mouth, there are white or whitish patches. Both the discharge and the patches have the consistency and smell of bread or a light cheese, though the smell can also be associated with beer.

5: Bulimia Side Effects - The Effects Of Bulimia On Your Health - Nurse's Guide
Between six and ten million adolescent and teenage girls and women have eating disorders. More than one million males have an eating disorder and the numbers are rising.


Creative Commons License
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.
Spanish taslation