
Dianne Hansen |
September 9, 2008 .Dave is making special preparations to go on vacation with me for 2 weeks. He’s working extra hard in the woods to earn cash money for the trip. That means he’s up between 4:00a.m. and 5:00a.m., out the door by 6:30a.m. and in the woods shortly after 7:00a.m., cutting and loading his truck. He’s able to make 2 deliveries a day and he’s finding huge trees that require some splitting just to get the blocks of wood up onto the 1 ton flatbed truck. His strength is tremendous.
Last night he couldn’t sleep and his back was in pain. He’s a go-getter and he pays the consequences! Well, what to do? We apply the oils that soothe his pains (PanAway, Frankinsence, Peppermint, Ortho Sport…all these by Young Living Essential Oils) and we refresh his electrolytes with Jogger’s Juice from www.drhuggins.com. What happens? He’s breathing heavily and snoring minutes later… He’s able to relax his body and his mind. No racing thoughts. S L E E P.
It’s important for him to protect his bipolar mind and the tendencies toward mania that a stressful schedule might impose on him. So we protect his mind as we protect his body. We’ve learned how to make our bodies and minds relax.
Now YOU can do that too! Experience the oils, order them online and use our sponsor #605520. www.youngliving.com
| 0.0 |
If you would like to make a comment, please fill out the form below.
Hi:
I would like to say the bipolar disorder has to be a chemical balance. I was diagnosed with it. Certain time of the day I can’t function, no matter how much I sleep. This bothers me when people discourage a doctors advise, because all doctors are not bad. I have racing thoughts, so much sometimes that I want to scream. One minute you can become, sad and the next minute happy. It is a terrible disorder. If not treated, you can do excess damage to your brain. Having this disorder messes up the complete congnitive part of your thinking process. The doctor put me on lamactil, did not get the dose right. But will try again. Depression is not the same as bipolar or anxiety.
Hi Michael,
I appreciate dialog with you. I believe you about the chemical imbalance. You realize, don’t you, that the food and drink (as well as the medicines) you put into your body affect your chemical balance/imbalance. Right?
You owe it to yourself, I think, to experiment with what my husband, Dave, claims balances his chemicals, both smoothing out mania and depression.
Are you open to this?
Warmly,
Dianne
406 882-4050 MST