Kimberly Burnham
Author of "Awakenings: Peace Dictionary, Language and the Mind, A Daily Brain Health Program" Kimberly Burnham, PhD (Integrative Medicine) investigates the relationship between memory, language, caring and pattern recognition to create a daily brain health exercise program enabling people to achieve better neurological health, mood, and quality of life. She is on a mission to create more peace and understanding in the world by collecting and writing about the nuanced meaning of “Peace” in 4,000 different languages and is looking for funding to complete the project. Known as The Nerve Whisperer, Kimberly uses words (books, presentations, and poetry), health coaching, guided visualization, and hands-on therapies (CranioSacral therapy, acupressure, Matrix Energetics, Reiki, and Integrative Manual Therapy) to help people heal from nervous system and autoimmune conditions. She also focuses on vision issues like macular degeneration and supports people looking for eye exercises to improve driving and reading skills as well as athletic visual speed. An award-winning poet, Kimberly grew up overseas. The child of an international businessman and an artist, she learned Spanish in Colombia; French in Belgium; then Japanese in Tokyo and has studied both Italian and Hebrew as an adult. The author of “My Book: Self-Publishing, a Guided Journal”, she can be reached for health coaching, publishing help, bible study zoom presentations or talking about peace at NerveWhisperer@gmail.com or http://www.NerveWhisperer.Solutions.
February 23, 2015
Blogs, Commentary
A religious person is not to say, "If God wants me to be ill, I will be ill, and if God wants me to recover, God will heal me without medical intervention,"
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February 9, 2015
Blogs, Commentary
Disgust, it turns out, is a very personal but also often cultural value. Sometimes we call people who take pleasure in something we find disgusting, "ghoulish" or "sick" but they are just making different choices.
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February 2, 2015
Blogs, Commentary
Interestingly enough, "prayer was associated with an increased likelihood of hypertension, and spirituality was associated with increased diastolic blood pressure."
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January 26, 2015
Blogs, Commentary
It turns out it vitally matters how conscious we are about who we choose to listen to, what we watch on TV or the computer screens or the things, people and experiences we surround ourselves with.
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January 22, 2015
Blogs, Commentary
What can we each do to ensure our own heart health and the health of the people in our community?
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January 14, 2015
Blogs, Commentary
Religious and spiritual people are healthier than people who are not, seems to be what the medical research is saying these days.
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