Practitioner profile 11597...India
Practitioner 11597…India is an accomplished academician who retired after serving as principal of three prestigious schools. She holds a B.Ed degree and an MPhil in English literature. Helping to provide education to underprivileged children is very close to her heart. Her first job was that of an evening program coordinator with an NGO involved in the education of disadvantaged children. This later evolved into daytime teaching in regular schools and led to a teaching career lasting almost four decades. Over the years, she has volunteered with ASHA, India, in the area of education, assisted at the Olcott Memorial School, and has contributed to the enrichment of the Balwadi curriculum (for rural preschoolers); all of these institutions serve deprived children and slum dwellers. A memorable incident happened to her as a young headmistress in 1984 when, during a school function, Mother Teresa unexpectedly called her and blessed her by laying her palm on her forehead. In 2013, her contribution to the field of education was recognized by the Rotary club with a 'Nation Builder' award.
She has been involved in seva from an early age when she regularly visited old age homes. Later, as the wife of an army officer, she led the 'unit welfare centers' for the soldiers. She briefly participated in the Vidya Vahini project in 2014, but her contribution was sporadic due to her then hectic work schedule. Presently, she is volunteering with a spiritual organisation for building the communication skills of ashram inmates.
The practitioner's husband, an exemplary army officer, was a staunch Shirdi Baba devotee and she joined him in this worship. In 2004, her husband went into a comatose state and this tragedy brought an unexpected stream of Sathya Sai devotees into her life. She, along with her younger daughter, was able to visit Prashanthi Nilayam during Guru Purnima 2004 and since then she feels Swami’s divine guiding arms around her and her family, all the time, steering them towards progress and well-being both professionally and spiritually. The physical suffering, pain and helplessness she underwent and witnessed, which ended with the tragic loss of her husband in 2006, opened her heart to alleviate the suffering and pain of others. However, at that point, she was busy trying to stabilise her own household and be a support for her children.
It was in September 2015, after her move to Bangalore, that a name board outside the Vibrionics clinic in Brindavan, Whitefield, caught her attention. It was just a fleeting introduction and her journey with vibrionics really began in 2017 when the vibrionics website accidentally presented itself to her. She became an AVP in February 2018 just before her retirement and a VP, 13 months later. So far, she has treated well over 1000 patients with a huge range of illnesses, in addition to providing administrative assistance when required such as transcriptions. She regularly assists Practitioner 11210 in the documentation process at the Wellness clinic in the Whitefield hospital and contributes towards the ‘In Addition’ section of vibrionics newsletters.
After becoming a member of IASVP in March 2019, she teamed up with Practitioner 10354 to treat patients at the medical camp in a Shirdi Baba temple in Bangalore. She has noticed that many patients with skin and digestive issues get better with vibrionics but then some other problem emerges. She believes this is due to poor hygiene and sanitation in the area surrounding the camp. She takes every opportunity to educate these patients on this subject and also gives preventive remedies, especially when waterborne diseases are rampant. In her experience, only a third of the patients treated in camps follow the prescribed dosage, take appropriate precautions, and collect refills on time, these are the ones who benefit the most. For example, two patients with chronic psoriasis showed tremendous improvement where other treatments had not helped.
The practitioner has yet to understand the process of measuring recovery. Sometimes there is a visible change for the better but very often the patient has had other positive changes in their life which may have helped the cure. She says that most illnesses are due to blocks in the circulatory system and her experience shows that adding CC3.7 Circulation to most remedies achieves faster cures. She keeps detailed patient records which help her in taking the right course of action promptly during follow-up visits, especially in cases where there is a pullout which she finds happens in 8% of her patients.
Watching her mentors in action has taught the practitioner that serving with dedication, maintaining a calm demeanour during consultations, and being 100% in the moment, helps one to connect with the patient at a deeper level. She would like to further develop and nurture her attitude to enable her to become more empathetic towards patients. She is a good role model for her patients since she keeps herself fit by exercising daily and eating a balanced diet and giving her best to every task. She sees herself more as a life coach than practitioner, hence counselling her patients comes naturally to her. In keeping with that, she suggests healthy lifestyle changes to those of her patients who she feels are psychologically ready (about 10%) to take the plunge.
The practitioner's personal understanding is that there are patients from all strata of society who are unhappy with allopathic treatment as they are aware of its side-effects and complications, hence 'Vibrionics' is definitely the 'medicine' most needed in the present times.
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