Healing With the Power of Meditation:
How to Heal Your Body With Your Mind
BY DINA PROCTOR
photo: angus
From the Editors: This article is excerpted from Dina Proctor’s, book which is an in-depth look at her journey from self destruction to self actualization through the practice of an ingenious healing meditation she developed. In it, she interviews Dr. Bruce Lipton a well-respected cell biologist whose seminal work, The Biology of Belief, explains the profound connection between mind and body and the use of meditation for healing.
The 3×3 guided healing meditation that she refers to is a daily practice that she developed as she emerged from her life’s darkest point, struggling to overcome suicidal depression and alcohol addiction. The format is simple, but powerful—spend three minutes doing the guided meditation three times a day, the practice of which was Dina’s primary tool for healing and led to her life’s work. Dina has generously made available three of her powerful ‘3×3 healing meditations’ that she mentions throughout this piece as a free gift to Conscious Lifestyle readers. These can be downloaded at the end of article.A few months into my experience of healing from addiction, and almost two years after I’d developed the intuitive eating technique I shared in Chapter 7, it occurred to me that, if my 3×3 healing meditation could be so effective at ending cravings and addiction, it might also be able to even out imbalances in the cholesterol levels in my blood. Ever since I’d tried the high protein diets years earlier in my life, my overall cholesterol level had been higher than normal. Could my 3×3 meditations bring it to normal?
I was on an eight-day personal development retreat called “Breakthrough to Success” led by Jack Canfield in Arizona during the summer of 2011 when I started developing a 3×3 healing meditation specifically focused on my cholesterol levels. Throughout the retreat Jack led us through guided meditations, and they gave me the idea that I could visualize the blood within my body healing and transforming during my 3×3 meditations. Plus, I was already scheduled for my annual blood work about two weeks after the retreat, which would give me a chance to see the results.
After a few days of trying different visualizations during my 3×3 healing meditations, I found one that I liked best. I started out visualizing a gentle but laser-like beam of healing energy entering my body straight into my heart. I imagined a warm sensation as the beam infiltrated and surrounded my heart. As the warmth grew stronger, I pictured the healing energy in the form of a thick liquid or serum, like warm honey, slowly seeping from my heart muscle into my bloodstream. I kept my focus on the warm feeling of the serum moving into my bloodstream in all directions. I followed it in my mind’s eye, moving through my chest into my legs and arms, fingers and toes, and circling back again into my heart.
“For those who believe, no proof is necessary. For those who don’t believe, no proof is possible.”
– stuart chase
After a few of days of this specific focus in my 3×3 visualization, I could sense that my blood levels were evening out. I visualized the imaginary serum healing each blood cell it touched as it traveled throughout my body. After each three minute healing meditation, I intuitively knew that my cholesterol levels were gradually bringing themselves back into balance.
Three weeks after the retreat, I had my routine blood work done as planned, and I was amazed, but at the same time not entirely surprised, by the results. My cholesterol was down from the prior year’s reading of 227 to 177. I knew in my gut that the visualization work I had done in my healing meditation had caused the improvements, but it was still mind blowing to realize the power of my belief and meditation to heal my own body.
I was seeing the power of the mind over the body more and more from my own experience, and my thoughts constantly went back to Dr. Lipton’s book and his discussion of the science behind why and how the mind can so efficiently and dramatically improve the body. I wondered what comments Dr. Lipton would have on my own experience. Would he agree with the interpretations I had of his science; that is, that even in cases of addiction, belief can heal the body? Would he think I was crazy to even have tried it?
One afternoon, on impulse I sat down and wrote Dr. Lipton an email saying that I was writing a book about my experiences healing with meditation and requesting a phone interview with him to include in this book. I couldn’t believe it when I got an email from his assistant telling me that he would be happy to spend half an hour on the phone with me! We set a date, and I put together a list of questions that his book had inspired me to ask about my own healings.
I was nervous as the day of our phone interview approached, but it turned out to be a fun and enlightening experience. Dr. Lipton immediately made me feel at ease by asking me to call him Bruce, and I wasted no time in sharing my experiences with my 3×3 healing meditation and asking for his feedback. We ended up talking for over an hour.
I asked Bruce question after question about his theories and the specifics of my healings. My first question was, straight up, “I’ve spent three minutes three times a day in meditation for the past couple of years, and, even though three years ago I was a suicidal alcoholic,
I’ve been able to drink alcohol since overcoming my addiction without having any cravings or negative side effects. Does that surprise you? Do you have any ideas that might explain my ability to do that?”Bruce responded with a good-natured laugh and said that this didn’t surprise him at all.
“The addiction isn’t an illness, Dina,” he told me. “It’s not a physical, organic thing. The addiction is a consequence of learned experience and repetitions of patterns. Is alcoholism in the genes?” he asked me rhetorically. “The answer is no. In the science of epigenetics it’s been found that it’s the perception of your environment that controls your genes. You’re not a victim of your genes because you’re the one who can change your environment—or, more importantly, change your perception of your environment—and thus change your response to it.”
“In the science of epigenetics it’s been found that it’s the perception of your environment that controls your genes. You’re not a victim of your genes because you’re the one who can change your environment.”
I was excited to hear him say that my perceptions were the trumping factor, that by changing my perceptions (which I’d been doing with my 3×3 healing meditations) I was changing my body.
“Let me tell you some fundamentals of how the mind works so this will be more clear to you,” Bruce said. “The cells of your body are merely following instructions given by the nervous system, by the brain. The nervous system does the interpretation. You can easily see this when you see two people reacting to the same stimulus with very different reactions, one positive and one negative. As your perception changes, you change the message that your nervous system communicates to the cells of your body. Your mind controls your biology. That’s what the placebo effect is about; the mind believes the pill will work and so it does.”
Bruce continued. “Now, there are two different parts to the mind, the subconscious part and the conscious part. The subconscious is like a tape recorder, just playing old programs and running 95% of your reactions and decisions. For most people the conscious mind only operates about 5% of the time.
“In your case,” he said, “with your three-minute, three-times-per-day healing meditations, you broke the norm. Those healing meditations constantly and consistently interrupted the tapes that the subconscious was playing. Your old tapes of needing a drink or feeling overwhelmed or frustrated or depressed in your life were constantly being run off their tracks. Even your belief, your subconscious tape, of defining yourself as an alcoholic and therefore never able to drink again, was interrupted. Without knowing it, you were doing one of the most powerful things you could have done in your own healing. You stopped listening to the subconscious tapes and started living in the present moment, in effect bringing yourself to your healing.”
“Your mind controls your biology. That’s what the placebo effect is about; the mind believes the pill will work and so it does.”
While I knew how effective my 3×3 healing meditations were, I didn’t really understand why until Bruce explained this to me. I had thought their value came from introducing positive ideas on a consistent basis. It was interesting to learn that their value was also in the regular interrupting of my old thought patterns, making it easier to leave them behind. I was so excited to have it put into a scientific context, and explained in language I could understand.
But I had a question. I asked Bruce, “I know my 3×3 healing meditations have worked for me; do you think it could work to help others find their own healing too?”
Bruce said. “Well, I want to be clear that merely reading your book—or any self-help book—and being able to comprehend the concepts does not provide what’s necessary for someone’s subconscious to be rewired, for a reader to achieve their own healing. Understanding the concept is very different from integrating it into everyday life. It’s only in constantly interrupting the tapes, or through an extraordinary experience like a deep, emotional transformative moment or a powerful hypnosis like you found in your 3×3 healing meditations that you can achieve self-healing. It’s not hard to do, but it’s not something that most people have experienced. It involves trusting the intuitive knowledge and letting go of the story playing subconsciously, which most people base their life decisions on without realizing it.”
“The physical expression is the consequence of the mind’s program—the program comes first, the physical expression second.”
I was struck by his mention of hypnosis. I’d never done hypnosis before and was always a little skeptical of it, actually. But his description of it as achieving an open, receptive state of mind necessary for transformation, fit exactly with my experience in my 3×3 healing meditations.
Another thought occurred to me. “I have an idea I’d like to run by you,” I said. “It seems to me that the more centered I am within myself, the closer I am to my own source of wellbeing, and the closer I am to the power of healing. It’s like there’s a continuum of connection that underlies my life, and as I maintain my focus on staying connected to that power source, I feel happier and more fulfilled, and my body naturally stays healthier and free of addiction and disease. I’m coming to believe that sickness isn’t unpredictable or random; it’s just an indicator or symptom of how far I’ve wandered from my point of strongest connection. So the more connected I become, the more disease and addiction naturally fade from my body. And the more disconnected I am, the more sickness I experience. What do you think about that?”
photo: goshina photocase.com
“Absolutely,” Bruce said. “The physical expression is the consequence of the mind’s program—the program comes first, the physical expression second. The function of the mind is to create coherence between your beliefs and your reality.”
I’d been following everything he said so far, but I got a little stuck on that last point. “Sorry, Bruce, but I didn’t quite get that. Can you say more about it?”
“Of course!” Bruce said enthusiastically. “Meaning, if I have a belief, then the function of the mind is to manifest that belief so it becomes reality. For example, if I have a belief that I’m going to die of a disease because someone told me so, then the function of the mind is to convert that belief into physical manifestation, and it’s no surprise that my belief becomes reality. But it’s not because I have a terminal disease that I end up dying; it’s because I believe this disease will kill me.”
“The starting place of all healing is the trust and commitment to follow our inner guidance, those internal nudges.”
“Emotion is a telling factor,” he continued. “If you have a strong emotion, positive or negative, around a certain belief, it pretty much ensures that the particular belief will become your physical reality. The science of epigenetics is not the science of being defined by your genes or environment; it’s the science of understanding how your interpretation of your life events and environment affects the cells of your physical body.”
All of this made perfect sense to me. As my beliefs about my body’s ability to heal itself had changed, my body had changed. And it was the strong emotion connected to that ability—my passionate desire and deep knowing that I could have complete freedom from addiction and disease—that ensured that this became my reality.
Bruce ended our conversation with words that summed up the crux of what I had learned about healing since beginning my 3×3 healing meditation practice.
“The important thing is to be present, as they say in Buddhism,” he said. “Being present is having your focus on the conscious mind, which breaks the cycle of what’s being run by the subconscious mind. What you’re doing in your 3×3 healing meditations is getting present. You’re interrupting the old tape of negative beliefs and becoming intensely present, which is why you were able to experience what you’ve described as experiences in higher consciousness.”
I especially loved his closing words: “Being fully present means not having a negative interpretation of what is happening in the moment; it’s being an unbiased observer of it. You’re free of your subconscious tapes in moments where you might have normally reacted differently, but your interpretation—and response—has started to change.”
We ended the call with words of mutual appreciation, and I hung up the phone and sat for a few moments in silence, reflecting on everything I’d just learned. Bruce had explained more than I’d even hoped for. He had explanations and a scientific context where I had only had first-hand experiences, and that expanded my understanding profoundly.
As Bruce said to me during our chat, just reading this book—or any article or book—isn’t enough to cause transformation. Everyone has their own best path and their own truth that they need to follow. I’ve shared my story and Bruce’s knowledge here, hoping to give anyone who has experienced less than optimum health and wellbeing the inspiration and hope that, no matter how bad the affliction has been, our thoughts and beliefs can be changed with practice and discipline.
That means the possibility for healing is always there. I believe that the starting place of all healing is the trust and commitment to follow our inner guidance, those internal nudges, and maintain an open mind to think very differently than we have in the past.
Free Download: The 3×3 Guided Meditation for Healing
Dina has generously shared three of her 3×3 guided healing meditations with all Conscious Lifestyle Readers.
1. Breathing in the Good
2. Total Relaxation
3. Liquid Light
Visit her website at the link below to download your free copy:
dinaproctor.com/consciouslifestylebonus
This article on healing meditation is excerpted with permission from Madly Chasing Peace: How I Went From Hell to Happy in Nine Minutes a Day by Dina Proctor.
About The Author
Dina Proctor is a life and business coach, inspirational speaker, and bestselling author of Madly Chasing Peace: How I Went From Hell to Happy in 9 Minutes a Day. After hitting emotional rock bottom, she created a process called 3×3 Meditation that enabled her to transform every aspect of her life. This simple and incredibly effective method has gained the support of Jack Canfield, Dr. Bruce Lipton, and is now helping thousands of others improve their lives. Visit her website: dinaproctor.com
This is just what I needed. Thank you so much for sharing.
Wow! This article answers quite a few things I’ve wondered for years. I can never manage to get the effects from my morning meditation sessions to last throughout the day, I’m going to try the 3X3 sessions in hopes that I can break up the “auto-pilot” thinking.
I think what you have achieved, Dina, is truly inspirational. And I too believe in visualisation and meditation. However, I am wary of all Bruce Lipton has to say. Essentially he is blaming people for being ill, due to their negative perceptions and that disease is not inherited. I do believe there is plenty of scientific evidence that suggests different! After all, children are innocent and filled with wonder about the world and yet become ill and even die. This isn’t due to their perception of the world. Illnesses can be inherited.
Hi Rebecca, thanks for your thoughtful comment. In regards to children, perceptions are actually inherited genetically and can be transferred as limiting beliefs unintentionally by parents to highly impressionable young children, while this is not their fault, per se, the fact that they have illnesses can in fact be caused by their own inherited perceptions. I’d be careful about making the leap to the claim that children don’t suffer illness due to inherited perception, because they do, however, they may not be at fault as you mention. However, most of us are not really at fault, as the perceptual conditioning we receive and inherit mostly occurs during childhood and is carried for the rest of our lives. Adults are not necessarily at fault either in that regard… however, it is our responsibility to do the inner work if we want freedom and health mentally, emotionally, spiritually and physically.