All Is Well: Heal Your Body With Medicine, Affirmations, and Intuition (43 page)

Read All Is Well: Heal Your Body With Medicine, Affirmations, and Intuition Online

Authors: Louise L. Hay,Mona Lisa Schulz

Tags: #General, #Body; Mind & Spirit, #Inspiration & Personal Growth, #Self-Help, #Personal Growth

BOOK: All Is Well: Heal Your Body With Medicine, Affirmations, and Intuition
5.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

1/8/13 7:51 AM

Bibliography

Manuck, S.B., et al., “An Animal Model of Coronary-Prone Behavior,” in

M.A. Chesney and R.H. Rosenman, eds.,
Anger and Hostility in Cardiovascular and

Behavioral Disorders
(Washington, D.C.: Hemisphere Publishing Corp., 1985).

Marchant, J., “The Effects of Different Social Conditions on Breast Cancer Induc-

tion in Three Genetic Types of Mice by Dibenz[a,h]anthracene and a Comparison

with Breast Carcinogenesis by 3-methylcholanthrene,”
British Journal of Cancer
21, no. 3 (September 1967): 576–585.

Muhlbock, O., “The Hormonal Genesis of Mammary Cancer,”
Advances in Cancer

Research
4 (1956): 371–392.

Parkes, C.M., et al., “Broken Heart: A Statistical Study of Increased Mortality

among Widowers,”
British Medical Journal
1, no. 5646 (March 1969): 740–743.

Rees, W.D., and S.G. Lutkins, “Mortality of Bereavement,”
British Medical Journal
4

(October l967): 13–16.

Reznikoff, M., “Psychological Factors in Breast Cancer: A Preliminary Study of

Some Personality Trends in Patients with Cancer of the Breast,”
Psychosomatic

Medicine
17, no. 2 (March–April 1955): 96–108.

Seiler, C., et al., “Cardiac Arrhythmias in Infant Pigtail Monkeys Following Mater-

nal Separation,”
Psychophysiology
16, no. 2 (March 1979): 130–135.

Shaywitz, B.A., et al., “Sex Differences in the Functional Organization of the Brain

for Language,”
Nature
373, no. 6515 (February 16, 1995): 607–609.

Shekelle, R.B., et al., “Hostility, Risk of Coronary Heart Disease, and Mortality,”

Psychosomatic Medicine
45, no. 2 (1983): 109–114.

Smith, W.K., “The Functional Significance of the Rostral Cingular Cortex as Re-

vealed by Its Responses to Electrical Excitation,”
Journal of Neurophysiology
8, no. 4

(July 1945): 241–255.

Tiger, L., and R. Fox,
The Imperial Animal
(New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1971).

Van Egeron, L.F., “Social Interactions, Communications, and the Coronary-Prone

Behavior Pattern: A Psychophysiological Study,”
Psychosomatic Medicine
41, no. 1

(February 1979): 2–18.

Fifth Emotional Center

Adams, F.,
Genuine Works of Hippocrates
(London: Sydenham Society, 1849).

Brown, W.T., and E.F. Gildea, “Hyperthyroidism and Personality,”
American Jour-

nal of Psychiatry
94, no.1 (July 1937): 59–76.

241

All Is Well interior.indd 241

1/8/13 7:51 AM

A ll i s w e ll

Morillo, E., and L.I. Gardner, “Activation of Latent Graves’ Disease in Children:

Review of Possible Psychosomatic Mechanisms,”
Clinical Pediatrics
19, no. 3

(March 1980): 160–163.

———, “Bereavement as an Antecedent Factor in Thyrotoxicosis of Childhood:

Four Case Studies with Survey of Possible Metabolic Pathways,”
Psychosomatic

Medicine
41, no. 7 (1979): 545–555.

Voth, H.M., et al., “Thyroid ‘Hot Spots’: Their Relationship to Life Stress,”
Psychosomatic Medicine
32, no. 6 (November 1970): 561–568.

Wallerstein, R.S., et al., “Thyroid ‘Hot Spots’: A Psychophysiological Study,”
Psy-

chosomatic Medicine
27, no. 6 (November 1965): 508–523.

Sixth Emotional Center

Booth, G., “Psychodynamics in Parkinsonism,”
Psychosomatic Medicine
10, no. 1

(January 1948): 1–14.

Camp, C.D., “Paralysis Agitans and Multiple Sclerosis and Their Treatment,” in

W.A. White and S. E. Jelliffe, eds.,
Modern Treatment of Nervous and Mental Diseases
, Vol. II (Philadelphia: Lea & Febiger, 1913): 651–671.

Cloninger, C.R., “Brain Networks Underlying Personality Development,” in B.J.

Carroll and J.E. Barrett, eds.,
Psychopathology and the Brain
(New York: Raven Press, 1991), 183–208.

Coker, N.J., et al., “Psychological Profile of Patients with Ménière’s Disease,”

Archives of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery
115, no. 11 (November 1989):

1355–1357.

Crary, W.G., and M. Wexler, “Ménière’s Disease: A Psychosomatic Disorder?”
Psy-

chological Reports
41, no. 2 (October 1977): 603–645.

Eatough, V.M., et al., “Premorbid Personality and Idiopathic Parkinson’s Disease,”

Advances in Neurology
53 (1990): 335–337.

Erlandsson, S.I., et al., “Psychological and Audiological Correlates of Perceived

Tinnitus Severity,”
Audiology
31, no. 3 (1992): 168–179.

———, “Ménière’s Disease: Trauma, Disease, and Adaptation Studied through

Focus Interview Analyses,”
Scandinavian Audiology
, Supplementum 43 (1996):

45–56.

Groen, J.J., “Psychosomatic Aspects of Ménière’s Disease,”
Acta Oto-laryngologica

95, no. 5–6 (May–June 1983): 407–416.

Hinchcliffe, R., “Emotion as a Precipitating Factor in Ménière’s Disease,”
The Jour-

nal of Laryngology & Otology
81, no. 5 (May 1967): 471–475.

242

All Is Well interior.indd 242

1/8/13 7:51 AM

Bibliography

Jellife, S.E., “The Parkinsonian Body Posture: Some Considerations on Uncon-

scious Hostility,”
Psychoanalytic Review
27 (1940): 467–479.

Martin, M.J., “Functional Disorders in Otorhinolaryngology,”
Archives of Otolaryn-

gology-Head & Neck Surgery
91, no. 5 (May 1970): 457–459.

Menza, M.A., et al., “Dopamine-Related Personality Traits in Parkinson’s Disease,”

Neurology
43, no. 3, part 1 (March 1993): 505–508.

Minnigerode, B., and M. Harbrecht, “Otorhinolaryngologic Manifestations of

Masked Mono- or Oligosymptomatic Depressions,”
HNO
36, no. 9 (September

1988): 383–385.

Mitscherlich, M., “The Psychic State of Patients Suffering from Parkinsonism,”

Advances in Psychosomatic Medicine
1 (1960): 317–324.

Poewe, W., et al., “Premorbid Personality of Parkinson Patients”
Journal of Neural

Transmission,
Supplementum
19 (1983): 215–224.

———, “The Premorbid Personality of Patients with Parkinson’s Disease: A Com-

parative Study with Healthy Controls and Patients with Essential Tremor,”
Ad-

vances in Neurology
53 (1990): 339–342.

Robins, A.H., “Depression in Patients with Parkinsonism,”
British Journal of Psy-

chiatry
, 128 (February 1976): 141–145.

Sands, I., “The Type of Personality Susceptible to Parkinson’s Disease,”
Journal of

the Mount Sinai Hospital,
9 (1942): 792–94.

Siirala, U., and K. Gelhar, “Further Studies on the Relationship between Ménière,

Psychosomatic Constitution and Stress,”
Acta Oto-laryngologica
70, no. 2 (August 1970): 142–147.

Stephens, S.D., “Personality Tests in Ménière’s Disorder,”
The Journal of Laryngol-

ogy and Otology
89, no. 5 (May 1975): 479–490.

Seventh Emotional Center

Adams, D.K., et al., “Early Clinical Manifestations of Disseminated Sclerosis,”
British Medical Journal
2, no. 4676 (August 19, 1950): 431–436.

Allbutt, T. C., and H. D. Rolleston, eds.,
A System of Medicine
(London: Macmillan and Co, 1911).

Charcot, J.M.,
Lectures on the Diseases of the Nervous System,
George Sigerson

(trans.), (London: The New Sydenham Society, 1881).

Firth, D., “The Case of Augustus d’Este (1794–1848): The First Account of Dissem-

inated Sclerosis”
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine
34, no. 7 (May 1941): 381–384.

243

All Is Well interior.indd 243

1/8/13 7:51 AM

A ll i s w e ll

McAlpine, D., and N.D. Compston, “Some Aspects of the Natural History of Dis-

seminated Sclerosis,”
The Quarterly Journal of Medicine
21, no. 82 (April 1952): 135–167.

Moxon, W., “Eight Cases of Insular Sclerosis of the Brain and Spinal Cord,”
Guy’s

Hospital Reports
20 (1875): 437–478.

———, “Case of Insular Sclerosis of Brain and Spinal Cord,”
The Lancet
1, no.

2581 (February 1873): 236.

244

All Is Well interior.indd 244

1/8/13 7:51 AM

Acknowledgments

Completing a book is a matter of, in the words of Barbra Strei-

sand, “Putting It Together.” And there are many people and com-

panies who have been instrumental in this process and in making

it possible for me to teach its material on the road. Some may be

obvious and some may surprise you but all have been an enor-

mous help.

I spent a lot of time and work on this with, of course, the won-

derful Louise Hay, the great legend in mind-body medicine. The

times I spent with Louise on Skype going over case studies have

been some of the most monumental of my life. I spent 35 years ed-

ucating myself in classrooms, hospitals, libraries, and laboratories

trying to put together, bit by bit, the connection between emo-

tion, intuition, the brain, the body, and health. She sat in a room

listening to clients’ stories and came up with the same informa-

tion. Go figure. I am honored to work with this giant of woman.

To the people who I go to for advice, Hay House CEO Reid

Tracy and COO Margarete Nielsen, thank you for giving this kid

a chance. And I would never, never, never forget my wonderful

editors who help me with my paretic left hemisphere. Patty Gift,

true to her name, is a gift—and on her way to becoming a legend

in this industry. We go way, way back. And Laura Gray, I have sub-

mitted your name to the Vatican for sainthood for what you have

245

All Is Well interior.indd 245

1/8/13 7:51 AM

A ll i s w e ll

done with this book, especially the endnotes. You are brilliant, pa-

tient, and calm, and you somehow maintain this stance without a

positive tox screen. How do you do it without valium? People want

to know. To rockstar Donna Abate, all the people in publicity and

production, plus Nancy Levin and all the conference crew—you

make Hay House a legend in the publishing industry, so says
The

New York Times.

To my southern family, Miss Naomi, Mr. Larry, and everyone

else around Peaceful Valley. You have prayed for me throughout

life and back to life. We have laughed, cried, and learned a lot to-

gether. Through floods, national and natural disasters, and all the

good times, you are always there with that drawl saying, “Well,

Honey, we lo’ove you!” I lo’ove you, too, and thank you. And while

we’re talking southern, thanks also to Helen Snow for those won-

derful pseudo-obscene “Cheep Cheerios” chicken graphics. They

make my day.

Caroline Myss, my conjoined twin, separated-at-birth and put

up for adoption. Who also has the gene for Montblanc pens and

animated art, among other biological “conditions”—you make

me feel so loved. How about a hand of Portuguese poker? Deuces

and one-eyed jacks are wild. Your mom, Delores, the card-shark,

can deal.

What would I do without my Sephardic-sister Laura Day?

Weekends in the “city” with mad-cap adventures. I love you to

pieces. To my Portuguese cousin Barbara Carrellas, an authentic

genius in her field. You are always there for me when I need you.

And to my Australian aunt, Georgia, who created scandal in the

hospital during my recent surgery by bringing genitalia-shaped

chocolates to my room. The line of people who wanted a sample

wound down the hospital corridor. What an original with a big

heart and brain to match.

Helping me hold to my vision, Avis Smith is a rare Hebrew

teacher and Torah scholar. I am proud to call her my chavrusa.

And thank you to Artscroll for not filing a restraining order be-

cause of all those books I ordered.

To my past mentors. Every moment with these people made a

contribution to this book in not a small way: Dr. Margaret Naeser,

246

All Is Well interior.indd 246

1/8/13 7:51 AM

Acknowledgments

Deepak Pandya, M.D., Edith Kaplan, Ph.D., Norman Geschwind,

M.D., Chris Northup, M.D., and Joan Borysenko, Ph.D.

I wouldn’t be able to get to work without my pit crew. Electri-

cal System Tune-up: neurologist Dr. David Perlmutter. Chassis Re-

build: Dr. Kumar Kakarla. Headlight Maintenance: breast surgeon

Dr. Rosemary Duda. Meridian Management to keep the motor run-

ning: Dr. Fern Tsao, Dr. Dean Deng, and Colleen Tetzloff, R.N., N.P.

To Drs. Janie and Gerald LeMole for being there in Phoenix,

Arizona, when I, as they say, almost bought the farm. You saved

my life and helped me walk again. Thank you.

Advancing art is easy; financing it is not. Thank you to my

money team George Howard, Paul Chabot, and Peter the Accoun-

tant. And then there are the web people who keep things going

along the ethers. Thank you to Mr. Jeffrey and Wanda Bowring. I

do not know how you do what you do, but keep doing it. Ditto for

my transcriptionist, Karen Kinne. How would I live without you?

You can type the voice in my head. And Marshall Bellovin, thank

Other books

Plague of Memory by Viehl, S. L.
Can't Stand the Heat? by Margaret Watson
The Penultimate Truth by Philip K. Dick
Lead Me Not by A. Meredith Walters
Sources of Light by Margaret McMullan
Mahu Surfer by Neil Plakcy
Brash by Laura Wright
Testers by Paul Enock
Hunt the Falcon by Don Mann, Ralph Pezzullo