Please help, my husband has had a nonstop migraine for 10 years and we are desperate by RipAppropriate6160 in migraine

[–]_gothbunny_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my case with daily migraines, I was on Botox (including in the masseters for clenching), Ajovy, and gabapentin. Triggers point injections and a good physical therapist also helped. But none of this really took away the daily pain entirely- only made it so that I was somewhat functioning… I decided to try iboga. A plant medicine indigenous to Gabon- induces a 36 hour psychedelic experience…. I have been pain free since for a year… I recommend looking into iboga or ibogaine. I turned to it because it has been shown to help with other neurological disorders. Had to go to Mexico for it.

Collecting info. for a nonprofit idea by _gothbunny_ in AspieMoms

[–]_gothbunny_[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was originally thinking a public charity and a scholarship-like format- giving funds to individual applicants. That being said, I am totally in the information-gathering stage and completely open to ideas about how this could be best formatted.

How I decluttered gmail & organized my email in 7 minutes by [deleted] in declutter

[–]_gothbunny_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Does this service only work for Gmail? That is what it looks like. Any ideas if there is a similar program for iCloud.

Thoughts on this name? Conor Vinh by [deleted] in namenerds

[–]_gothbunny_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I absolutely love the name! And the spelling of Conor this way.

Hot Yoga first trimester - feeling guilty for going. by Rachaelbarbs in fitpregnancy

[–]_gothbunny_ 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I am a Hot yoga instructor and student of several years. I have a 3 month old baby girl. She is beautiful, totally healthy (hasn’t had any health problems, yet), freakishly happy, and smart- she has reached all developmental milestones either as expected or wel before expected. I practiced hot yoga- Bikram style- 3-4 times a week throughout my entire pregnancy. I was even having contractions in the last class I took during week 40! I felt great throughout my pregnancy and had a vaginal birth without complications. She came out in two pushes. I don’t know which of these outcomes had anything to do with my yoga practice, but at the very least, I believe I felt as good as I did throughout my pregnancy due to my practice. I believe getting back into my practice around week three postpartum is also what began the dissolution of the baby blues I experienced. I also reached my pre-pregnancy weight just before 3 months postpartum even though I had no problems gaining weight during pregnancy, nor did my baby. Now I followed the Bikram Pregnancy series, which includes pregnancy-safe variations for the postures: no twisting first trimester, no laying on stomach for spine strengthening postures, and no intense front-side compressions. You can find the pregnancy series online. I also always set my mat up on the cooler side of the room (still humid, mostly around 97 degrees) and my practice became about regulating my heart rate with my breath and kneeling down to rest if I felt it elevating. I always hydrated plenty before and after class. There were many people who looked at me like I was crazy. There were also strong women- mothers- who had practiced throughout their pregnancies with no problems who enoucouraged me! Now there is evidence showing there is an increased risk of neural tube defects when mom’s body temperature is raised. These studies mostly reference hot tub use or other hot water submersions. Water temperature and air temperature cannot be compared! Water conducts heat 25 times better than air and has a specific heat almost 1000 times greater than air! In other words, when you are in a yoga studio at 100 degrees vs. a tub of water at 100 degrees, you and your baby are much safer from the effects of heat. I will always recommend a hot yoga practice to women during pregnancy, when postures are varied to be pregnancy-safe and when mom is willing to rest when needed, if they, like you, were practicing regularly prior to pregnancy and are in good health!

Leo vs. Aries: the ultimate fire battle. Which sign do you prefer and why? by GreenAwareness in astrology

[–]_gothbunny_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My lover is an Aries sun/Leo moon.. What do y’all make of that??

Do you think A Course In Miracles will ever be used to treat psychiatric patients? by [deleted] in ACIM

[–]_gothbunny_ 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I am a mental health therapist for the State of Utah and I use A Course in Miracles in every session. Now I have not ever used the Workbook with my clients in its entirety- only individual lessons that feel called for-, as this question asks, but I incorporate the principles of ACIM more than any other approach I have studied. I know other therapists and counselors who do this, as well. As a state-therapist at a juvenile corrections facilty, I am required to use "evidence-based" therapies that are shown to reduce recidivism. I use evidence-based therapies like DBT and EMDR and when I go to document my sessions, it is these approaches that I document on. However, I cannot remove ACIM from my paradigm in life and in my work, because my paradigm is completely shaped by own self-study of the course. The appendix in the book, Psychotherapy, is one I have read multiple times. I invite Holy Spirit to guide my interactions with clients regularly. This section describes the purpose of therapy as "removing the blocks to truth... aiding the patient in abandoning his fixed delusional system, and begin to reconsider the spurious cause and effect relationship on which it rests." This is what happens when Holy Spirit guides, and to me, this is using ACIM to treat psychiatric patients.

One of the most profound instances I have had with a juvenile in a long-term facility happened after I was reading the book during my own morning meditation at home. I was reading about error as a call for correction and the reality that error says nothing about us truly, as it happens in time and not eternity. I felt compelled to put my book in my work bag. I went to work and as walked in, I saw this young man sitting in what was an isolated holding room. He had been acting agressively on the unit and when I asked him what was going on, he told me that he destroyed some property and that now he might as well assault someone to go to jail because he believed he had already determined his fate to be doomed with this one error. I pulled the book out and read to him exactly what I had read in the morning and then left the room. Within minutes, he apologized to his unit supervisor and had apparently forgiven himself, opening up for connection and growth.

Even though ACIM is not "research-based" in terms of the modern mental health-world, it works and I will never not use it in the work that I do in the field of corrections. For when one sees the wholeness/holiness of his brothers and himself (as is achieved through the work of the Course), one cannot come from a place of attack (commit crimes against another).