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WHEE Spotlight
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WHEEKLY ARTICLE
Creating and Holding A Space for Healing; Your Inner Self Knows the Answers
by Daniel J. Benor, MD, ABHM
The careseeker often comes with the expectation that the caregiver will provide the answers to what is causing the problem and the best recommendations for what to do about it. This is particularly true in conventional medical care.
Even when they are ready and eager ...
WHEE TESTIMONIALS
Personal Use Of WHEE
Dear Dan, I am continually amazed with the results of the WHEE session you did with me in Phoenix. Every time I revisit the event of losing my beautiful home - I see it as a beautiful memory forever filed in my consciousness as an achievement, to have known, felt and experienced.&n...
FEATURED THERAPIST
Featured Practitioner (July 2010)
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Photo #1 (May 2007)
STARS OF THE GALACTIC CENTER We call upon the power which sustains the planets in their orbits, that wheels our Milky Way in its 200 million year spiral, to imbue our personalities and our relationships with harmony, endurance, and joy. Fill us with a sense of immense time so that our brief, flickering lives may truly reflect the work of vast ages past and also the millions of years of evolution whose potential lies in our trembling hands. - John Seed, Thinking Like a Mountain, 1988
Credit: Susan Stolovy (SSC/Caltech) et al., JPL-Caltech, NASA
The center of our Milky Way Galaxy is hidden from the prying eyes of optical telescopes by clouds of obscuring dust and gas. But in this stunning vista, the Spitzer Space Telescope's infrared cameras, penetrate much of the dust revealing the stars of the crowded galactic center region. A mosaic of many smaller snapshots, the detailed, false-color image shows older, cool stars in bluish hues. Reddish glowing dust clouds are associated with young, hot stars in stellar nurseries. The galactic center lies some 26,000 light-years away, toward the constellation Sagittarius. At that distance, this picture spans about 900 light-years.
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