Organic Health
I am the Founder of Organic Health Mastery. This new system uses states of consciousness that combine all we know in biology, neurolinguistic programing, spirituality, energy and vibrational medicine for a comprehensive way to your well being.
My personal mission is to bring awareness to our bodies ability to heal itself.
I research the latest information, modern technology, and infuse it with the best ancient wisdom from many traditions and the result is a healthy as humanly possible you.
I begin the session by addressing the area of concern that you present. Then I connect us to Source, ask exploratory questions, and allow my intuition to offer solutions to your specific medical condition. During the session more than just an exchange of words and information takes place, but a deeper exploration of energy and the body’s intelligence is examined and harnessed. The result is a powerful healing session.
If you are experiencing health problems, then a session will empower you with guidance and information that offers an integrative and personalized solution.
Schedule a Session with with Dr. Sarah today!
Are you ready to get started right now? Great!
Thank you for supporting the work of Dr. Sarah Larsen!
This page will allow you to pay for services with Dr. Sarah or to donate to her efforts to spread health and healing.
Half hour Session: $125
Hour Session: $250
Financial Aid: Available upon request.
Donate: Thank you for your contribution
You can see Dr Sarah at her office or you can receive your session by phone or Skype from the comfort of your own home or office.
The process works like this:
- Schedule your session by PayPal or by e-mail
- We set up an office visit or phone/Skype session
- I record the session
- You receive an mp3 from your session
- You discover the your healing and well-being and how to make it a reality!
In Summary, Organic Health Mastery is a combination of the fields of Energy Medicine, Eastern and Western Medical Traditions.
………………………………………………………………………………..
Larry Dossey describes three periods in medicine: Eras I, II, and III.
These eras describe the periods through which medicine has progressed since the second half of the 19th century.
Era I, which can be called “mechanical medicine” and which began roughly in the 1860s, reflects the prevailing view that health and illness are totally physical in nature, and thus all therapies should be physical ones, such as surgical procedures or drugs. In Era I, the mind or consciousness is essentially equated with the functioning of the brain.
Era II began to take shape in the period following World War II. Physicians began to realize, based on scientific evidence, that disease has a “psychosomatic” aspect: that emotions and feelings can influence the body’s functions. Psychological stress, for example, can contribute to high blood pressure, heart attacks, and ulcers. This was a radical advance over Era I.
The recently developing Era III goes even further by proposing that consciousness is not confined to one’s individual body. Nonlocal mind — mind that is boundless and unlimited – is the hallmark of Era III. An individual’s mind may affect not just his or her body, but the body of another person at a distance, even when that distant individual is unaware of the effort. You can think of Era II as illustrating the personal effects of consciousness and Era III as illustrating the transpersonal effects of the mind.
It’s important to remember that these eras are not mutually exclusive; rather they coexist, overlap, and are used together, as when drugs are used with psychotherapy, and surgery is used with prayer.
|
|
What is the most important issue in health care today?
The major challenge we face is how to spiritualize and humanize medicine, how to infuse it with a compassionate quality that answers to our inner needs as well as to the needs of our physical bodies. The good news is that this challenge is being met. In the future, high-tech medicine will remain with us and will become even more prominent. But in addition, psychological and spiritual approaches to healing will assume a substantial position. Healers will take their places in surgery suites, coronary care units, and emergency rooms, as they are already beginning to do in some hospitals. As a result, it will feel different to be a patient. One will know that “the system” cares about the soul as well as the body. Fantasy? Hardly. These changes are already penetrating some of the major hospitals in the country.


