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Working with Death and Dying


CEU’s for NCCAOM

Traditional Chinese and Tibetan medicine hold views unique from Western medicine on the nature of signs of death and in the treatment for patients at the time of death. Western medicine uses physiological phenomena to identify signs of dying. Chinese medicine believes signs of dying can be summarized as different symptom complexes and doesn’t lay emphasis on single symptoms. If signs of dying are observed in patients, Chinese physicians continue to treat the source of disease laying emphasis on clarity of mind, which enables the body to protect itself from outside invasion and improve symptoms.

The Esogetic therapies presented in this seminar integrate well with Chinese and Tibetan approaches by supporting the clarity of the consciousness of the client and releasing unresolved emotions as a client moves into the death process.

In this weekend seminar we will:

  • Introduce a comparative view of Western, Chinese and Tibetan signs which indicate dying and theoretical approaches to care for dying which align with the Esogetic approach.

  • Discuss research regarding the electromagnetic field produced by necrotic radiation, containing energy, internal structure and information which may permit the continuation of consciousness beyond death of the body.

  • Share key questions around personal death awareness and mourning for use with clients.

  • Demonstrate a series of Esogetic therapies to calm the client, relieve pain, release fears and process unconscious emotions in the dying period.

$300.00

Andrew Holochek has written that:

“Death is nothing to be feared but something to be understood. Aging is a preliminary practice for death: our dreams help us prepare and meditation is death in slow motion.”

I have wanted to create a process for a while for Practitioners to explore their own relationship with death using Esogetic therapies which they can then share with others. The ideas for seminar will be based on a training that Peter Mandel created in the late 1990’s looking at various themes that present themselves in the recognition of our mortality.

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Later Event: May 2
Kirlian II