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Showing posts with label crushed optic nerves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crushed optic nerves. Show all posts

Friday, February 23, 2018

The Power of Optimism

B'SD

8 Adar, 5778

Whew, the happiness of Purim  culminates next week (Wednesday night and Thursday for most people this year, Thursday night and Friday for Jews in Jerusalem). I'm hanging on to that as sad headlines fill newscasts.

About feeling down... Plato had something to say about that.




Let's look at life from a different angle, to cheer up a bit, OK?


  I want to share some nice news. This past summer, the neuro-ophthalmologist following my case (recovery from total blindness due to crushed optic nerves, and very compromised health) made an announcement dictated into my official medical records. He indicated that none of the staff members had had a clue how to help me to see again once the BENIGN brain tumor had been removed after crushing my optic and other nerves. However, "full credit goes to the patient who invested in alternative healing techniques" and recovered her vision and strength (I do aerobics, swim, bike, work, and have a social life). She had faith in herself and her future, and figured out how to restore her sight. 

Read about what I'd done to heal, how and why other ill people can mimic those actions and mindsets to heal as well as they can, too. 


Buy the E-book or print edition of EMPOWER Yourself to Cope with a Medical Challenge



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Face Your Medical Problems with Dignity. Face Your Future with Optimism.

Fill your efforts with a can-do attitude. Heal your heart and mind, maybe your body.

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Loving Southern Life and The Medical Miracles that Came with it!

B'SD

23 Av, 5777

If you've been reading this blog and its associated book over the years then you're aware of several upheavals in my life: Being struck blind and almost dead by a benign brain tumor called a Petroclival Tentorial Meningioma, emergency life-saving brain surgery, extraordinary efforts to regain health and vision, and relocating from one city to another in order to achieve several other goals.

It's enough to leave a person feeling winded.

And yet, I caught my breath, time after time, looking toward goals and steeling myself to reach them as I limped to the finish line.

I earned certification in ICD10 medical coding that way, plus certification in counseling skills, including Spiritual Chaplaincy (end of life issues), and rescue credentials from Israel's Homefront Command. I wrote a book to help other people to better cope with medical or mental health setbacks (kids, too!).


http://www.booklocker.com/p/books/3067.html?s=TrackingCode

I've experienced an extraordinary life. As I indicated in the book, whenever I feel frightened or endangered, I pretty much focus on happiness, grab life by the collar and holler (inwardly or outwardly) "I want more!"

A person in daunting circumstances needs to strengthen themselves to face difficulties.

That mindset helped me to reach a miraculous milestone. I marked it with festivity. 

This past Shabbat, I'd prepared a kiddush, a celebratory party, in my synagogue. Here is the speech I gave to my friends, neighbors and fellow congregants about why I'd bothered to share my happiness with them. I share it in the hopes of strengthening your resolve to deal with your setbacks in optimal fashion:


Parshat Eikev Dvar Torah

Throughout chumash, we learn to love GOD, to walk in His ways. Moshe Rabenu (Moses) emphasizes this imperative in Parshat Eikev. Generations later, Mikha tells us that justice and kindness as we “walk humbly with HaShem (GOD)” are critically important. He rhetorically asks what sort of sacrifices we ought to make to show our closeness with HaShem, but then specifies that being fair, just, a practitioner of kindness, and walking “with” GOD humbly is the perfect recipe for achieving that closeness.

Now let’s look at what impresses me deeply as I continue my Beershevian life: I’ve only been here a bit over two years. What strikes me most is the compassion here, the genuine dvekut  (attachment) to Torah values. I can’t recall ever hearing the slightest hint of lashon hara (gossip). No idle musings, no diatribes, nothing. That reality sums up the wonder and beauty of Beer Sheva: You take morals seriously. The sweetness of character among all of you is remarkable. I keep picking up on it in other ways, too.

In your zekhut (merit), I’d like to share a story from the Chafetz Chaim with you.  He once mentioned that map makers indicate important cities with stars or special colors, perhaps special lettering. “But,” the Chafetz Chaim remarked, “that’s not how HaKadosh Barukh Hu (the Holy One) looks at the world. He/She is impressed with the holy lights of kedusha (holiness) coming out of specific locations. You think or Rome and Paris are important? Not in heaven. They don’t light up. It is the places where Jews practice compassion, where mercy and unconditional love are the stuff of daily life, that look large in Heaven. They light it up!”

I’ve obviously paraphrased the Chafetz Chaim, but you get his drift.

I came to Beer Sheva legally blind due to a medical mishap. I’ve dealt with it since 2006 by adhering to an organic diet, avoiding synthetics, and indulging in innovative vision therapies. But I’d hit a plateau in 2014-15. My eye wear prescription had fallen about 20 times by then. But no improvements followed. Doctors and I accepted the fact that I’d reached my potential for recovering sight after having been blinded by a benign brain tumor. I prayed every day for more medical miracles, did alternative healing techniques new to me, and prayed harder. I knew that it would take a miracle to gain “normal vision.” What would it be?

I learned to see life more sweetly by living in Beer Sheva. I learned it from you. I am grateful to each person standing here, as you have done something that touched me deeply. We can speak privately about that if you wish.

I’ve prepared this Kiddush (party) to thank you for your accepting me, physical disabilities and all, into Beer Sheva. I’ve experienced some heart-breaking discrimination elsewhere, and each day of my life here is a menukhat hanefesh (spiritual comfort)



You’ve made Beer Sheva shine in heaven. And you made a medical miracle by relaxing my heart and soul. After extensive, sophisticated vision exams from February to June this year, exams on equipment you could never imagine to exist, my medical team found astonishing proof that I am no longer “legally blind.” Yes, I have the wandering eyes of strabismus/pazila; I still need to be extra careful when descending stairs or curbs, but my vision is almost certifiably normal. It’s a miracle, and I credit you for making it happen. I have found deep, meaningful happiness in Beer Sheva, and much of it here in this synagoge. 

This Kiddush is my way of saying a big “Thank you.” You are beautiful to my eyes.






Buy the E-book or print edition of EMPOWER Yourself to Cope with a Medical Challenge





Face Your Medical Problems with Dignity. Face Your Future with Optimism.

Fill your mind, heart and soul with a sense of an ever-better future. Then ask GOD to help you to make it happen!

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Life Lesson for the Medical World

B'SD

15 Cheshvan, 5776

Today's post comes from a sense of frustration and wonder. How is it that my astonishing recovery from crushed optic nerves that blinded me, deteriorating health and the medical world's despair that I could recover, is not making a bigger impact on the medical world or on the public? 

The evidence of what enabled my recovery speaks for itself: Avoiding pollutants is good for human health. Commercial products filled with poisons for human health undermine it.

I welcome your comments about the issue. I made mention of it on Facebook, earlier today:

I've lost count of how many times this problem was cited in my book and blog, and how many times I've wondered what it will take for the western medical world to admit the reality it faces on an hourly basis.
I suspect that the public is not being told the truth: Climbing death rates and rising numbers of babies born deformed, with cancer or with serious neurological damage, young couples with infertility problems unheard of before the proliferation of food-processing chemicals that no human body can tolerate, synthetic this and that in hygiene products, etc., etc., etc.
Ask yourselves why so many cutting-edge cancer treatment centers exist, why learning disability rates are as high as they are, how on earth pregnant women hold dangerous tumors with the babies growing in their wombs.
Then ask yourself "Is all that suffering worth a Mall Muffin the size of a Buick? Shiny hair at the expense of my health? Convenience foods known to cause cancer? Make-up that will threaten my very life let alone my appearance? Do I have enough self-respect and self-control to protect the life GOD gave me? How can I develop it?"

A group of chemicals commonly used in cosmetics and other personal-care products may stimulate the growth of breast cancer cells at doses much lower than…
FOXNEWS.COM
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Yocheved Golani Commercial enterprises profit from customer deception.
LikeReply19 mins
Yocheved Golani Here's an FYI i wrote about in 2010! We in the natural foods and lifestyle world know how immorally you've been conned. http://itsmycrisisandillcryifineedto.blogspot.co.il/...

ITSMYCRISISANDILLCRYIFINEEDTO.BLOGSPOT.COM
Yocheved Golani
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My childhood hero, Sydney J. Harris, used to write a column about things he found out when looking up something else. He did that for fun and to beat some doldrums.
So, to solve a case of writer's block I went online looking up some research information I wanted for the article I'm writing. I needed something fun to do.
I tell ya, some days I wonder if God laughs out loud, so to speak. Here's what turned up when I GOOGLED "improved eyesight":

: by Yocheved Golani “Don’t worry about it. You’re probably just overly stressed.” That was the message I kept hearing from doctors at my health clinic. They
UNITEDWITHISRAEL.ORG
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Yocheved Golani If you're new to friending me on facebook, here's an intro to the medical miracle story. I'm holding a copy of the original edition of the Cope with Medical Crisis book. http://itsmycrisisandillcryifineedto.blogspot.co.il/...

ITSMYCRISISANDILLCRYIFINEEDTO.BLOGSPOT.COM|BY YOCHEVED GOLANI
Yocheved Golani You can buy the updated version via super-fast delivery from my publisher. http://booklocker.com/books/3067.html
Yocheved Golani This morning I received a message from a prominent ophthalmologist and eye surgeon in the USA. I'd asked him "What are the rates of secondary blindness from Petroclival Tentorial Meningioma, and the rates of recovered vision? I searched for information but this is the best I found and it's not enlightening. http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/511120_3"

He replied, "A very good question. I would not be able to answer it."

AFAIK, I am the only person known to the medical world to have recovered sight after the type of medical mishap I experienced. And I am sad to realize that despite following my case for over a decade, none of the doctors who've examined me recommend my method of recovery. They discuss the phenom, but do not prescribe eating organic foods, avoiding synthetic clothing and hygiene products, or going to sleep soon after darkness sets in.

Do the wider world and me a favor. Buy someone who needs simple solutions a copy of http://booklocker.com/books/3067.html.

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Yocheved Golani One more thing: I went macrobiotic in June. My vision improved so much that I needed new glasses - the 20th lowered prescription in 10 years - by August.
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Find ways to go past a sense of despair and into pro-active self-help. Feel better, get your grin back and make progress as best you can. Buy the E-book or print edition of EMPOWER Yourself to Cope with a Medical Challenge





Face Your Medical Problems with Dignity. Face Your Future with Optimism.

Fill your mind with helpful facts.