Motivational Monday: Your Power
(Originally posted on April 22, 2019)

Most likely, everyone knows the story " The Wizard of Oz"
, and how Dorothy goes on an adventure down the yellow brick road so she can find the Great and Powerful Oz to help her get home! The metaphors and the lessons throughout this story are really wonderful, but the one that sticks out the most to me, is when Glinda tells Dorothy she had the power all along!
What if we have had the power all along?
What if our emotions—and our thought patterns—play a much larger role in our growth than we could even begin to know? In the attached clip, Dr. Guy Winch talks about the power of emotions, and our minds, in our physical health.
We pay so much attention to our bodies— we eat right, we take supplements, we exercise, we get out in the sun
—but we tend to forget about the power that our thoughts and emotions have on our bodies. It's commonly known how long-term stress can actually degrade your immune system and body over time, so the connection between emotional responses (both conscious and unconscious) and the physical body is very real.
Chinese medicine believes that every organ corresponds to the energy of a certain emotion, and that every disease stems from an imbalance in that emotion. For example, the liver is called the "angry organ," the lungs and the large intestine are associated with grief and depression, and fear is an emotion of the kidneys and bladder.
There was an experiment done in Finland
where they mapped emotions in the body. The participants reported that happiness and love sparked activity across nearly the entire body. Anger has been shown to increase your heart rate, arterial tension and testosterone production.
We all have these emotions, and most of us go through a range of emotions sometimes within the course of a day. It's not the burst of anger that affects us long term—it's the continued, chronic state of anger that will degrade our very physical being. Similarly, enormous amounts of grief can cause long-term affects including a weakened immune system. Even after we consciously have emotionally stabilized after a very strong bout with grief, our bodies are still reeling and can be severely weakened.
So back to Dr. Winch's talk
: the state of our minds (which we tend not to consider when we're struggling with something physical), can sometimes have the most profound affect on that physical illness. If we can get our minds in order, we can approach that physical situation totally differently. If we can be aware of the connection between our emotional state and our physical response, we can take better care of our health.
So what are you struggling with physically? What are you coping with emotionally? Are you happy? Are you fulfilled? Are you living a life of purpose?
IF NOT
...what can you do to change things? Your life, your physical well being, and absolutely everything else might depend on it! Remember: "You already have the power my dear..."
"Anything can happen if you let it."
--Mary Poppins
Sincerely,
Fatkin Natural Healing









