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The Start to Healing

2020. Postpartum. Age 34.

I had to learn to shut down my brain to survive. 

After giving birth, my body decided that it had had enough of me.  I had counted on my relative youth and otherwise healthy lifestyle to keep me going.  “I have to be spartan about every element of my life to stay healthy,” I had often explained to my coworkers.  “Otherwise, I’d have a heart attack.”  I said it like it was a joke.

“Stacey, why don’t you eat out?  You always have weird food in the staff fridge.”

“Stacey, why don’t you drink alcohol?”

“Stacey, you’re thin.  You’re not going to die if you miss a workout.”

“My lifestyle is the only thing keeping me going,” I replied.  My body was trying to communicate with me, even through the words I spoke, but I wasn’t listening.

My lifestyle was the only thing that kept me going, but it eventually wasn’t enough.

It started with endless clogged milk ducts during breastfeeding, until a lactation consultant said, “Something is amiss with your lymphatic system.”

My skin, which had traditionally been pale but nice, took on a dull cast.

Despite eating constantly, I was ravenous all the time.  (My body wasn’t synthesizing protein properly, so everything I ate was basically passing through me without doing any good).

I stopped driving because I didn’t trust myself to get anywhere safely.

My cognition was so depleted that I could no longer read to the end of a sentence, let alone write.  It was like someone took a blowtorch to my brain and melted it.  What had once defined me was rendered mush.

I began to lose my motor coordination, eventually not trusting myself to hold my newborn son unless seated for fear of falling with him in my arms. 

“Work hard now, it will pay off later,” had always been my mantra.  

But the hard work didn’t pay off.  I had pushed my body for years.  My body pushed back.  Harder and stronger than I ever could have imagined.  My body wasn’t interested in a future payoff; it was interested in taking revenge for my neglect of it. 

Listening to it became a literal matter of life or death.  My data-driven, Type A personality had betrayed me and couldn’t save me.  I knew this.  I knew that no amount of research or learning, the techniques I’d relied on to achieve success my whole life, could save me.  With limited options, I started working with a doctor whose methodology required a leap of faith.  

This doctor started muscle-testing me for what my body needed to get stronger.  

Every thing we eat, the air we breathe, the emotions we have- everything that enters our bodies in a literal physical sense, or an emotional or spiritual one- has the capacity to make us either weaker or stronger.  Muscle testing is a way to bypass your conscious mind and get to your subconscious mind, where your body knows what it needs to heal.

The doctor that tested me gave me bottles or herbs and said, “Your body wants this herb in this x dose x number of times per day.”  I started taking the herbs, dozens of them.  A detox pathway opened up over my eye, and toxins started dumping out.  I spent a few months wiping away the fluid that flowed out of me and squinting. I felt intense humiliation over my appearance because I looked like an ogre. 

More detox pathways opened up a few months later in my mouth.  (The health of your teeth is closely related to the health of your organs that correspond to that meridian in your body.)  As different organs began to dump toxins, lumps formed on my gums.   They felt like someone stuck a hot branding iron in my mouth, but it was part of my body learning to cleanse itself again.

My brain tried to talk me out of trusting my own lived experience.  “You’re paying this person?  This doctor is a fake!  You’re falling for this because you’re desperate!”

But somewhere, deep down, my own wisdom could not be washed away.  I went for a walk alone and asked myself, “Is this doctor a fake?  Am I falling for this because I’m desperate?”

My own voice began to speak, my body’s voice, the voice I had shut down for so many years.  It said, “This is real.  This is how you are healing.”

Our bodies are full of wisdom.  When I first started working with this doctor, I wanted to take extra doses of things because I figured that it was ok to suffer pretty badly short-term if it meant that I got to get well faster.  I still believed that I was supposed to be getting better faster and wanted to dictate the timeline of my wellness.  

But the doctor cautioned me against it and told me not to take any more than my body had requested.  I didn’t really want to follow what he said but I did because I knew, even if my less than stellar state of mind, that it was stupid to pay someone to help you heal and then disregard the advice you paid for.  It is only recently that I’ve realized that trying to boss my body around for so many years is probably what made me sick.

I used to be exhausted and full of dread every day going to work, but I ignored every sign my body was giving me instead of listening to it.  I subsequently sublimated unhealthy emotions, stopped absorbing my food properly, and was waking up multiple times a night sweating and replaying things that had happened during the day.

I don’t work through misery any more.  I won’t take a job that requires 10+ hours of a racing pulse each day, teeth grinding so hard at night that I woke up with pieces of enamel loose in my mouth, and hot tears let out and quickly suppressed in the four-minute “breaks” I had between classes. 

Instead, I acknowledge when my heart starts racing.  Instead of suppressing it, I ask my body what it needs.  

If we allow our bodies to speak, they will tell us what we need to do to heal. Your subconscious knows what’s best for you.  But it will only act as your white knight if you stop silencing it.

God taught me so many lessons through this experience, but one of them was this: Instead of looking for answers from other people, I now trust that answers that God gives me. I trust my own body, my own voice, above all others.

This ability to trust myself, to trust the God behind my body’s voice, has permanently changed how I approach life.

If you’re suffering physically, mentally, or spiritually, I encourage you to find some privacy and ask yourself, “Body, what do you need to heal?” For our bodies are so much smarter than our brains.

Thank you for sharing!

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  3. Jennifer Arimborgo

    This is an absolutely amazing story. I am so grateful to God for the healing that He helped you find!

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    1. Stacey

      Thank you so much for your kind words, Jennifer!

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      1. Jennifer Arimborgo

        ❤️🥰💕

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  4. Jeffrey H. King

    I’ve always been type A too. I knew I had bad genetics for heart disease and worked very hard at trying to eat well and exercise, especially cardio. My go to was my NordicTrack. I even took it with me on my frequent business trips. Between emergency double bypass (away from home, no less) and other near death crisis, it seems that age and genes are giving me a clear message – You’ve had it your way for years, and we’re taking over. It’s “old and fat” time! *sigh* Palliative nerve damage from an induced coma due to COVID has reinforced that I’m not going to exercise my way out of it.

    That, of course, leaves God. Turns out He’s better than exercise! Who knew?

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    1. Stacey

      Wow, wow. I’m not a doctor and have zero medical knowledge beyond what I’ve learned through experience, so I say this cautiously – have you ever grown comfrey to turn into tea? I actually also had nerve deafness and used comfrey and other herbs for it. We have some in our yard.

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      1. Jeffrey H. King

        Never heard of it. My first reaction was to figure out the typo before realizing you meant some herb. Is it perhaps something I can buy at a health store instead of growing it?

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    2. Stacey

      I did! So God closed every door except that job. It’s actually been a tough thing to accept though, because I was extremely unhealthy from stress as a result of that job. That is something I have been working through for a long time with God, because scripture says his yoke is easy and his burden light. However, that is not how I felt when I was in the classroom. I have received revelation about that time over the past few years since I left teaching, but it is still a bit of a struggle for me to accept. I learned a lot about spiritual warfare during those years and had some pretty wild experiences, including praying that certain spirits would not be allowed to enter my classroom and watching kids literally bounce back and be physically unable to enter at times. I know-trippy, right?

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      1. Jeffrey H. King

        So much to talk about!

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  5. Mark Lanesbury

    It takes great courage to take that step kind lady, and on the day that you do it will bring something wonderful into your life. That ever search for that love and happiness will be finally acknowledged in that exact moment…because it is ‘our’ love that we had been looking for. Ever searching for it ‘out there’ somewhere, not realizing our journey is to go beyond our fears and doubts and finally look within. Take a bow, that view from that inner mountain you have been climbing will now go on forever. Great share, thank you 😀❤️🙏🏽

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  6. Stacey

    Thank you, Mark, for your kind words! God gives me courage. We all have our mountains to climb in this life!

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