HEALING the WOUNDED HEART and its impact on the Auto Immune illness.

The bottom line I work from is this: It is all about the relationship between ‘us’ and the ‘outside world.’
That all things are about our perceived relationship to the apparent outside world, from conception, through utero and upon and beyond birth.
This fragile and vulnerable relationship is mirrored in our immune system, itself in ‘relationship’ to the apparent outside world.
When the heart gets wounded early in life and withdraws into ‘self protection’ it seems to impact the immune system and the whole of the relationship we have with the outside world.
It can create a radical sensitivity, a vulnerability, or a fear and hostility. All these affect the delicate balance in our gut, and in our entire digestive tract.
It can set up an unconscious ‘fight or flight’ mechanism that will run the entirety of our lives, or it can trigger unresolved and unexpressed anger and rage that creates heat and inflammation in the delicate system we have.
None of this is good in the long term, because all these suppressions of our energy, or build up of unexpressed anger and heat, eventually wear down the struggling auto immune system and leave it open and vulnerable to all sorts of issues.
If you put enough pressure on a system eventually it will collapse, thats the same with our inner systems.
And so, part of the response to ‘symptoms’ that present in all auto immune, as well as taking care of the physical needs, is to take a true and authentic look inside at what the heart is hiding, or what the heart is hiding from.
Releasing that energy, that vulnerability, that anger or fear, or disappointment, may not be the ‘magic bullet,’ but it is going to contribute to the healing of the whole organism.
The Warrior’s Path of Healing Auto Immune.
Great article. Its great to have a broader life path perspective on this kind of condition. Many thanks for the mojo. Felt some sweet healing vibes there.
Thank you, I truly appreciated the comment…Warms the heart x
Your more than welcome. Glad I could stoke that heart warming fire!