Extending the Art of Healing Through Anthroposophy

Medical section – Goetheanum ; Laura Scappaticci

Welcome to Extending the Art of Healing Through Anthroposophy with Dr. Adam Blanning and Laura Scappaticci. This podcast is an invitation to engage with a new perspective on health and your own healing processes, while learning more about the fundamentals of anthroposophical medicine.

  1. 1D AGO

    Healing Capacities, Medical Protocols

    In this episode, we ask what happens when medical protocol replaces human connection in medicine and in education. Medical and educational protocols are meant to meet as many people as possible in an average kind of way, but the response can be vastly different. We need to hold a space for listening to our students and our patients, our children and our community members, in order to discover the solutions that align with their values and needs. Adam discusses a measurement called sense of coherence, which decreases our risk of death by any cause by 15 to 20%. We explore the ways that coherence is eroded or strengthened in teenagers through screens, social media, and societal and family expectations. On a larger level, we ask how we can have a sense of coherence when we see and hear about global suffering and challenges. "What can I do about this today?" is a hard question to answer when the world around us or our inner world feels chaotic. We move into talking about the body and how the body is not like a car. We can replace parts, but the car doesn't have the capacity to heal itself like the human body does, and we can't mechanize emotional systems or our sense of life. Near the end of the podcast, Adam discusses a study that indicates that fevers, particularly in children on the autism spectrum, can help bring the individuality forward in a stronger way.  Throughout the past two seasons, we've been asking you to reclaim two minutes a day to restore your wholeness. What have you done in those two minutes? How are you reclaiming them? We'd love to know. Email us at extendingtheartofhealing@gmail.com and share your stories with us. Find more resources@helpthehealers.org and support this work by making a donation at MedicalSection.goetheanum.ch and follow us on Instagram Medical_Section. Thank you for listening and for sharing this podcast!

    58 min
  2. Rhythm Replaces Strength

    JAN 11

    Rhythm Replaces Strength

    The rhythms of the body and the rhythms of the planet have great wisdom, but rhythm is not about maximal efficiency, something that our current productivity culture insists upon. Rather, it is connected to vitality and life.  Our own capacity to heal is incredible, yet in our current western medical culture, we put more emphasis on outside interventions. This is true in educational systems, where we may not allow the natural unfolding of learning, but rather put standards and benchmarks above natural curiosity and interest. In other words, we have a regenerative body, but it needs time and rhythm to regenerate, to grow, to adapt, to learn.  Dr. Adam Blanning introduces us to "interoception," our ability to sense our own well-being, what Steiner called Life Sense. We look at the importance of the 24 hour rhythm, a cycle of light and dark, and its connection to our “I”, the most individual part of us.  We need forces of vitality to live and to heal. These forces are part of life and we can access them through the slow but wise physiology standing behind all of this, and behind anthroposophical medicine.  All of these thoughts, all of these fresh perspectives on healing, are why Adam and Laura are so excited to share our podcast with you! Please follow and share. Find more resources at helpthehealers.org and support this work by making a donation at medicalsection.goetheanum.ch.Email extendingtheartofhealing@gmail.com with your questions and ideas. Follow us on Instagram @medical_section.

    57 min
4.9
out of 5
11 Ratings

About

Welcome to Extending the Art of Healing Through Anthroposophy with Dr. Adam Blanning and Laura Scappaticci. This podcast is an invitation to engage with a new perspective on health and your own healing processes, while learning more about the fundamentals of anthroposophical medicine.

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