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  • Triple Warmer Meridian: 3 Exercises to Unlock Vital Energy Flow

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    “Freedom is within.” Or so the wellness brands, studios, and apps always remind you.

    But chances are, it’s a line you’ve heard so often it barely registers anymore. Because here you are, still on edge, no matter what stress-busting product or service you try.

    Well, here’s where many people would give up. But keep tuning in to your body, and you’ll unravel a signal already at work, traced through what ancient Chinese medicine practitioners call the triple warmer meridian.

    It’s the subtle energy pattern that tells you that nothing is random; that your body’s an intelligent system. And that recurring tension you’re experiencing is, in fact, your body’s way of telling you to pause, be present, and recalibrate well before total breakdown.

    What is the triple warmer meridian?

    This meridian, also known as san jiao in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), is a functional energy healing system that describes how your body organizes stress. It tracks how energy moves, how your temperature adjusts, and how fluids circulate, especially when you’re under pressure.

    Say you have a headache. The thing is that it rarely starts at the head (though that’s where the pain peaks). In actuality, it builds through the day as tension in the jaw and shoulders, and shallow breathing. By the time pain reaches the temples, the body has already been under pressure for hours.

    That’s the triple warmer meridian at work.

    Think of it as the “lighthouse” that alerts you to perceived threats, both mental and energetic, before physical symptoms would show up. “Its job is to save your life,” says Donna Eden, a self-healing advocate and trainer of Mindvalley’s Energy Medicine program.

    For over four decades, Donna has mapped how stress patterns travel through the body. Her work draws heavily on the principles of TCM, kinesiology, and clinical observation across thousands of case studies. She co-founded Eden Energy Medicine, a method now taught in over 20 countries, after noticing consistent energetic imbalances in people with fatigue, reactivity, and chronic tension.

    What she says aligns with what Lee Holden, a qigong, meditation, and tai chi expert, says about stress from an energy perspective. Under stress, he notes, “we don’t bring our best energy into our work.”

    That’s precisely what happens when the triple warmer meridian is overstimulated: you feel wound up and hypervigilant. It’s why Donna calls it the body’s built-in survival coordinator; always drawing resources in to protect, even when it can already let go. 

    So, cueing it into safety mode is one of the best ways to go full circle on self-healing. “The body,” she says, “knows how to heal. Energy is what helps it remember.”

    Triple warmer meridian points

    Where is the triple warmer meridian located?” you ask? Well, it runs along the outer edge of the body, starting at the ring finger, traveling up the outside of the arm, crossing the shoulder and neck, circling the ear, and ending near the temples.

    Every part connected in this meridian is a sequence of places where stress would first appear and build up in the body, as seen below:

    The triple warmer meridian chart

    Each point marks a place where stress tends to pause, tighten, and stack when the body stays in fight-or-flight mode. But once you see the pattern, it’s easier to notice when stress is knocking on your door.

    Triple warmer meridian points

    How the triple warmer meridian functions

    Functionally, the triple warmer meridian shifts the body into readiness by pulling energy toward what feels urgent. It’s why, when you’re feeling stressed, says Donna in her Mindvalley program, “the triple warmer keeps sucking the energy away.” 

    Here’s a breakdown of what that looks like:

    • Your qi circulation. Energy moves upward and outward, away from rest and repair. The body stays engaged, even when you’re sitting still.
    • Fluid movement becomes less efficient. Warmth and pressure build internally in response to qi disruption. It’s how you tend to experience bloating, heaviness, or restlessness at night.
    • You’re always stressed. And it’s because your nervous system remains on watch, scanning for more “threats.”

    Over time, you may find yourself constantly adapting but rarely resetting.

    In a 2007 paper in Physiological Reviews, neuroscientist Bruce McEwen described this buildup as “allostatic load.” It’s the slow strain that stress puts on your body long before symptoms like fatigue, pain, or illness show up.

    When Bruce’s research is viewed alongside traditional Chinese medicine, a shared idea shows up. In The Web That Has No Weaver, Ted Kaptchuk, a Harvard Medical School–affiliated scholar of Chinese medicine, explains that TCM focuses on patterns in how the body regulates and responds, rather than looking at symptoms one by one.

    So, where does the triple warmer meridian come into place? Well, it sits neatly at the heart of it all, offering a way to notice—and quickly mitigate—your stress levels.

    5 signs of imbalance in the triple warmer meridian

    When the triple warmer meridian stays active, your body keeps finding ways to cope, adapt, and compensate. It keeps doing that until the stress becomes obvious.

    Here’s what that can look like:

    1. “Yo-yo” energy levels. You may get through the day, yet your body never fully rests. By night, it feels tired but still alert and can’t quite switch off. “Fatigue,” Donna points out, “is often a sign that your energy has been pulled away from where you need it most.”
    2. Sleep that feels unfinished. An active meridian means you’re stressed out. So, it makes sense why it’s harder for the body to drop into deep, restorative sleep. Research discussed in Sleep Science Made Simple shows that when the stress response stays activated, the nervous system remains aroused, making sleep hard.
    3. Recurring tension in the same area. A clenched jaw, stiff, rigid shoulders, slow-aching neck and temples—these are classic symptoms of accumulated stress that, according to Donna, occur along the triple warmer pathway itself.
    4. Out-of-proportion reactivity. You’re more likely to feel irritated and experience outbursts, even in low-stakes situations. A study in Nature Reviews Neuroscience shows that when the fight-or-flight response remains active, the brain areas involved in impulse control and emotional regulation go “offline” more quickly
    5. Loss of spark in life. Donna says people often describe this as having “lost their passion… and their aliveness,” even though nothing obvious is wrong.

    These signs, she shares, often show up in people who’d deny their stress. “I look at how they’re holding themselves, how they breathe, how quickly they react,” she says, “and I know they’re very stressed out.”

    Together, these signs point to the same truth: the body knows how to cry for relief.

    3 triple warmer meridian exercises to boost vitality

    Donna knows the symptoms of imbalance by heart because she’s lived with them herself. Diagnosed with multiple sclerosis and chronic fatigue, she moved through cycles of exhaustion, neurological strain for years. But then, she discovered energy healing. 

    Through years of consistent practice, she rebuilt her vitality, layer by layer. And that experience laid the groundwork for the practices she now teaches through Eden Energy Medicine, which she co-founded with her partner, David Feinstein (himself a clinical psychologist and researcher). Their goal? To help others regulate their stress without equipment or long routines.

    Donna’s energy healing classes align with what science is discovering about somatic healing. Body-based practices, as a review in Frontiers in Psychology discovered, can calm the nervous system by nudging it out of high alert and back toward rest and recovery.

    Now, here are a few go-to ones that you try whenever you’re on the overdrive:

    1. The triple warmer smoothie

    Nope, this isn’t the kind of smoothie you drink. It’s an energetic one that Donna created to help you reframe all the triple warmer meridian emotions that can come up when you work on your stress.

    The idea is simple: guide energy along the meridian’s pathway so the body can release what it no longer needs and settle its stress response.

    To try it:

    1. Rub your hands together until they feel warm and awake. Give them a light shake.
    2. Place your fingers gently over your closed eyes. Inhale.
    3. As you exhale, slide your fingertips out to your temples.
    4. Inhale again as you trace up and over your ears, then down the sides of your neck. Let your hands rest on your shoulders as you exhale.
    5. Take one more deep breath. As you exhale, drag your hands down the front of your chest with gentle pressure and rest them over your heart.

    You can repeatedly “sip” on this smoothie whenever you need more calmness amidst the daily chaos. Follow Donna’s steps below to get it right:

    Instant Stress Relief with Triple Warmer Smoothie With Donna Eden

    2. The Blow Out technique

    Clenching your jaw through a conversation that shouldn’t matter that much? Congrats on the self-restraint.

    But here’s the double-edged sword to it: repressing your anger can quietly add to your stress load, which keeps your triple warmer meridian active.

    A 2011 study in the Annals of Behavioral Medicine found that holding in anger keeps the body stressed longer. This makes it harder for your nervous system to calm down.

    Thankfully, Donna and David’s Blow Out technique works wonders for this. It cues the meridian that you’re no longer seeing crimson, allowing your body to exit the fight-or-flight mode.

    To try it:

    1. Make loose fists and hold your arms in front of you, elbows bent.
    2. Inhale as you sweep your arms wide and up overhead.
    3. As your fists meet above your head, exhale forcefully through your mouth.
    4. At the same time, drive your fists straight down in parallel lines, as if you’re throwing something heavy to the ground.
    5. Repeat once more with the same force.
    6. On the third round, lower your arms slowly and deliberately as you exhale.

    This sequence helps clear pent-up charge and brings the body back into a steadier state.

    3. The Tarzan tap

    Now, here’s the thing: prolonged stretches of stress don’t always show up as agitation. Sometimes they leave you feeling zapped out, for which Donna’s Tarzap tap helps. It works with the center of the chest, where the thymus gland sits. 

    Research published in Cellular Immunology shows that the nervous system and immune system are closely linked, especially under stress. In energy medicine speak, this area is a point of resilience, where gentle stimulation, like the one the Tarzan tap provides, helps you return to your body.

    To try it:

    1. Curl your hands into relaxed fists.
    2. Gently tap the center of your chest, just below the collarbone.
    3. Keep the rhythm steady and comfortable.
    4. Breathe normally as you tap for about 20 to 30 seconds.
    5. Stop once the area feels warm or responsive.

    Donna often recommends this practice when energy feels low, motivation is thin, or the body needs support after stress has drained it. It’s a simple way to bring vitality back online without overloading the system.

    When it comes to healing and protecting our vitality, energy is your body’s best medicine.”

    The benefits of regulating the triple warmer meridian in your busy life

    When the triple warmer meridian stays overwhelmed, the body treats everyday low-grade moments like the emergencies they’re not. So when you regulate it, your stress load drops, and, as Bruce McEwan’s research has found, your body can finally shift into rest and recovery mode.

    Here’s what that changes, in real terms:

    • It’s easier to destress every day. By regulating the meridian well, Donna points out, “You will start dissipating some of the stress chemicals.” This, she adds, frees up your energy for systems responsible for repair, digestion, and immunity. It’s why people often notice they bounce back faster after long days.
    • You get better at decision-making. Donna often notes that when stress eases, clarity follows. With less energy tied up in protection, the mind doesn’t have to second-guess every move. Choices feel simpler to make, and you trust your intuition more freely.
    • You breathe deeper without trying so hard. When the brain stops scanning for perceived threats, the body no longer relies on short, shallow breaths to stay alert. A Frontiers in Physiology study shows that calmer, slower breathing patterns promote relaxation by improving oxygenation. This helps you properly relax and recover from the day’s hustle and bustle.
    • More calm focus, less rumination. The brain naturally shifts into the alpha wave state, which supports relaxed alertness, improved attention span, and reduced mental chatter. Here, you’ll find it much easier to stay in the present moment.
    • Sleep comes more easily. A balanced triple warmer equals a nervous system that’s out of alertness and into parasympathetic territory. This makes it easier for the body to drop into deep rest at night.

    When you stop living in reactivity, you can meet life with steadiness. It’s the ultimate perk of a regulated meridian.

    Regulated in real life

    The triple warmer meridian is proof that your body knows how to settle, recover, and reorganize itself. Mindvalley members, like the three below, are proof of what happens when people start working with their energy in simple, consistent ways.

    One quick note on health and healing: The experiences shared reflect personal journeys with energy-based practices. Energy healing, in general, is intended to support well-being and self-regulation. What it’s not is a stand-in for medical diagnosis, treatment, or professional care. 

    If you’re experiencing persistent symptoms, pain, or health concerns, it’s essential to consult a qualified healthcare provider.

    Reclaimed agency and emotional steadiness

    Before exploring energy medicine, New York-based Martina Schmidt felt reactive and unstructured. Once she discovered the daily practice, she started developing a different relationship with her emotions.

    “I learned that I have some control. I am not helpless or doomed,” she shares. By applying Donna’s energy-healing teachings, her emotional lows eventually lost their intensity. “Feelings of loneliness are not overwhelming if they come up.” 

    Over time, that inner steadiness has transformed into an undeniable sense of self-control. “I’m now driving my life. I’m not just waiting for it to happen.”

    Ease of anxiety and physical tension

    For Dean Mitchell, a photographer from the UK, anxiety, headaches, and chronic tension are a daily occurrence. But things took a positive turn once he began practicing energy medicine techniques. The approach, he says, “seriously helped me with all those things.”

    As his stress patterns softened, his body soon followed. “I had a lump underneath my chest that had been there for years,” he explains. But since he embraced energy healing, “it’s reduced down to about the size of a coin.” 

    And the sense of relief that washed over him was priceless. He adds, “I could [even] get over my anxiety and depression.”

    Mental and physical agility

    Melanie Cardwell’s experience with energy healing reflects a common outcome of triple warmer meridian regulation: clearer thinking. After committing to a simple daily routine based on Donna’s expertise, she noticed changes in her focus and memory. “My concentration and my memory,” she shares, “are a lot clearer and have improved.”

    That mental clarity coincided with physical ease. “I don’t have my aches and pains in my hips anymore.” The ease of movement, along with the mental clarity, has made her daily routine smoother and much more enjoyable.

    Frequently asked questions

    Why is it called the triple warmer?

    The name comes from how traditional Chinese medicine views the body in three functional zones, like the floors of a building:

    • The upper warmer covers the chest and lungs, so breathing, circulation, and how energy moves when you’re talking, thinking, or reacting.
    • The middle warmer sits around digestion, where food and fluids are processed into usable energy.
    • The lower warmer handles elimination, fluid balance, and the deeper systems that keep you grounded and steady.

    Together, they’re called the “triple warmer.”

    The thing is, it’s not a physical organ you can pinpoint. Think of it more as a coordination system that keeps these three areas “talking” to each other under stress.

    What emotion is associated with the triple burner meridian?

    The triple burner meridian responds to stress and the constant need to stay alert. 

    Emotionally speaking, this can look like:

    • Always emotionally on standby or people-pleasing,
    • Checking your phone and doomscrolling often,
    • Flinching at the slightest sign of noise, or
    • Easily angered at the most minor delays.

    Even when nothing is wrong, part of you stays ready for something to go sideways. Lee, for one, sees this pattern play out thousands of times in his three decades of clinical and teaching experience. “When your energy is scattered, your mind follows,” he explains in his Mindvalley program, Modern Qigong. In other words, you’re set to catastrophize, which biologically means your body is trying to stay ahead of perceived dangers.

    The good news here? Your brain’s doing its best to protect you. But its cost shows up in how much energy gets burned just staying on guard. As Lee adds, “Most people don’t realize how much energy they’re spending just staying alert.”

    Thankfully, energy medicine techniques, such as the one Donna teaches, can be your golden ticket out of the loop.

    Is the triple burner “yin” or “yang”?

    In TCM, the triple warmer meridian, or triple burner as it’s otherwise known, is considered a yang meridian. This means it’s connected to action and movement, like all other yang meridians in your body, like:

    • Large intestine meridian. Linked to elimination and release. It supports the body’s ability to let go, both physically and energetically.
    • Small intestine meridian. Involved in sorting and absorption, helping the body decide what to take in and what to discard.
    • Stomach meridian. It’s connected to digestion, appetite, and how the body processes nourishment into usable energy.
    • Bladder meridian. As the longest meridian in the body, it’s associated with fluid regulation, tension along the back, and stress storage.
    • Gallbladder meridian. Tied to decision-making, movement, and adaptability, it often reflects how the body handles pressure and choice.

    These “yang” ones are active when the body needs to respond, stay alert, and get things done. They help gear the body up for times when life feels demanding. 

    When that energy stays active for too long, though? Well, the body doesn’t get the necessary signal to slow down.

    But here’s where working with the triple burner works wonders. It helps that active “yang” energy settles once it’s no longer needed. And that’s how you shift from being perpetually on guard to feeling steady from within again.

    Live vibrantly, naturally

    Stress isn’t a personal flaw, nor is it random, either. It’s a sign that your body is doing its job, sometimes longer than it needs to. When you understand the energetic blueprint of how your body works, you gain a practical way to work with that response instead of against it.

    That’s exactly what Donna Eden teaches inside her Energy Medicine masterclass on Mindvalley. It’s designed to help you regulate your energy in real time, using simple techniques that fit into real life.

    In the session, you’ll learn how to:

    • Calm your stress response quickly, even on busy days,
    • Restore energy when you feel drained or scattered,
    • Improve sleep by helping your nervous system stand down,
    • Release emotional tension stored in the body,
    • Support immunity and overall vitality through daily energy habits, and
    • Build a consistent self-care practice that doesn’t feel overwhelming.

    Each focus point focuses on helping your body recognize safety again, so recovery can actually happen.

    Of course, the bigger picture matters, too. When you stop feeling pulled in all directions, you can reclaim clarity, steadiness, and trust in yourself.

    Welcome in.

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    Naressa Khan

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  • Healing Touch: What Is It & How Can It Help You? (+ Examples)

    Healing Touch: What Is It & How Can It Help You? (+ Examples)

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    The reassuring squeeze of a hand. The silent understanding in a hug. A comforting arm around your shoulders.

    Chances are, you know the feeling of warmth and solace these interactions bring. It’s at the heart of what “healing touch” is all about.

    However, it’s not just any touch. Rather, it’s a type of energy therapy that can help balance and heal your body in ways you might not have imagined.

    Everybody can heal themselves,” says Donna Eden, a pioneer in energy medicine and trainer of Mindvalley’s Energy Medicine Quest. And a great starting point is with the power of touch.

    What Is Healing Touch?

    Healing touch is a nurturing energy therapy. A practitioner uses gentle hand placements to support a person’s physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual well-being in a heart-centered and intentional way.

    Unlike traditional medicine, healing touch focuses on the whole person, not just symptoms. It views us as energy fields interacting with the environment.

    Our energies are electromagnetic. So if you align your energies up with somebody elses, you will move their energy. — @donnaedeneem Click To Tweet

    When this energy is imbalanced, it can affect our health, bringing about stress, anxiety, pain, emotional distress, and disturbed sleep, to name a few. Healing touch can help restore this balance, promoting a sense of peace and well-being.

    What’s great about it is its flexibility—it can be used in conjunction with other therapeutic modalities. In massage therapy, for instance, it can help enhance the relaxation and healing effects of the treatment. And in sound healing sessions, it can amplify the harmonizing effects of sound on the body. 

    Healing touch therapy vs. Reiki

    Both healing touch therapy and Reiki share some core principles—they focus on manipulating the body’s energy field, believed to influence physical and emotional well-being. They also emphasize relaxation and stress reduction during sessions.

    However, there are distinct characteristics that set the two apart. To give you a clearer picture, here’s a comparison:

    Feature Healing Touch Reiki
    Approach Structured and varied techniques to assess and balance the human energy system. Focuses on stress reduction and relaxation, promoting the flow of life force energy.
    Techniques Hands-on and hands-near-the-body methods to clear, energize, and balance energies. Practitioners channel life force energy to the recipient, primarily using hands-on healing.
    Philosophy Based on the interconnectivity of body, mind, and spirit and the healing potential of intentional touch. Emphasizes the self-healing ability of the body through the balancing of life force energy.

    Both healing touch and Reiki offer unique benefits, making them valuable in their own right. And understanding these differences can help you choose which might be right for you.

    How Does Healing Touch Work?

    The core idea of healing touch is to manipulate the energy field around the body. Practitioners use their hands to clear, energize, and balance the body’s meridians, helping the body’s natural ability to heal itself.

    The thing is, we all have an energy field surrounding our bodies that’s capable of reflecting, absorbing, and emitting energy and light. And it’s believed to be interconnected with our physical health. So when it gets disrupted or unbalanced, it can lead to aches, pains, or even stress.

    So practitioners do energy healing to restore that balance using various techniques, including:

    • Light touch: Gentle hand placements on or near specific areas of the body.
    • Scanning: Slow hand movements over the body, sensing imbalances in the energy field.
    • Non-touch techniques: Focusing their intention and directing energy from a distance.

    Interestingly, there’s promising research suggesting the potential benefits of healing touch therapy. One study, for example, looked into the use of healing touch for patients recovering from laparoscopic bariatric surgery. It found that patients who received healing touch experienced significant reductions in pain, nausea, and anxiety compared to those who didn’t. 

    This suggests that this kind of therapeutic touch can be a valuable tool to use alongside traditional medical care. It can help promote well-being and be a way to manage symptoms.

    7 Science-Backed Benefits of Healing Touch Therapy

    There’s a growing body of research exploring this holistic healing. Here are seven perks to highlight, backed up by science:

    • Reduces anxiety, tension, and stress
    • Reduces pain
    • Improves immune function
    • Eases the effects of trauma and PTSD
    • Improves sleep quality
    • Reduces fatigue
    • Enhances sense of spiritual connection

    The bottom line is, the body already knows how to heal, as Donna points out. “You just have to get the energy in alignment.”

    It’s important to note that healing touch is not a replacement for conventional medicine. However, it can be a valuable complementary therapy to enhance your well-being and support your body’s natural healing abilities.

    What to expect from a healing touch therapy session

    Curious about what happens during a healing touch session? Here’s what it can look like:

    • The Setting: Sessions typically take place in a calming and comfortable environment, often resembling a massage therapy room. You’ll remain fully clothed throughout the session.
    • The Process: The practitioner will likely begin with a consultation, discussing your health concerns and goals. They’ll then guide you to lie comfortably on a massage table or sit in a chair.
    • The Touch: Unlike massage, this approach involves gentle hand placements on or near your body or even light-scanning movements to assess your energy field. Many people report feeling deeply relaxed or even falling asleep during the session. Additionally, it’s common to experience sensations like warmth, tingling, or a sense of release.
    • The Duration: Healing touch sessions typically last 45 minutes to an hour.

    Keep in mind that this type of therapy is a collaborative effort. Feel free to communicate openly with your practitioner about any questions or discomfort you might experience during the session.

    3 Healing Touch Therapy Exercises to Try From Energy Healer Donna Eden

    Energy is your life force, according to Donna. She would know, being an expert in energy medicine and all. As a matter of fact, it gives you “tools to stay happy, healthy, and vital.”

    Here are three exercises she teaches in her Quest on Mindvalley:

    3 Ways to Release Stress & Anxiety Using Energy Medicine | Donna Eden

    1. Forehead Hold

    When you get stressed, you can lose, well, you lose a lot of blood from your forebrain that goes into the body for the fight-or-flight response,” says Donna. So since the electromagnetic nature of your hand acts like a magnet, it can help pull blood into the area, helping you regain mental clarity.

    How do you do it? It’s as simple as placing your palm on your forehead for a few minutes.

    For deeper stress relief, consider placing both hands on your forehead, with your fingertips touching and your thumbs resting gently on your temples. These points, known as neurovascular points, can further aid in lifting you out of a stressed state when held gently while contemplating your stressors.

    2. Heart Chakra Tap

    Healing touch can go hand-in-hand with chakra healing. Your practitioner can use techniques to align your chakras, which ultimately will help balance your energies.

    The heart chakra is the energy that bathes the heart,” says David Feinstein, a clinical psychologist and Donna’s husband. “And the heart is all about your deep emotions.”

    Here’s how you do it: Place one hand over your heart chakra, located at the upper chest, and with the other hand, begin tapping between the fourth and fifth fingers on the outside edge.

    This spot correlates with the meridian line for the “triple warmer,” which governs the fight, flight, or freeze responses.

    By tapping it, it engages both the heart chakra and the triple warmer simultaneously. And as you do it while thinking about what stresses you, you interrupt the stress response, promoting a sense of calm.

    3. Energy Blow-Out

    When you get very stressed, there’s a buildup of stress chemicals in your body that you really need to move out of your body,” says Donna.

    So start by thinking about your stressor while standing with your arms extended in front of you, fists clenched. Inhale deeply, then, with a forceful exhalation, throw your arms upwards and outwards, imagining the stress being expelled from your body.

    This movement helps to clear your central meridian of negative energy. What’s more, it engages multiple energy systems, including your chakras and the penetrating flow, to facilitate a complete energy cleanse.

    FAQ

    Is healing touch effective?

    Yes, healing touch is effective. Numerous studies and personal testimonials support the efficacy of healing touch in reducing stress, managing pain, speeding up recovery from surgery, and improving overall well-being.

    It’s a complementary therapy, meaning it can be used alongside traditional medical treatments to enhance healing.

    Is healing touch safe?

    This approach is a non-invasive, gentle therapy. So it can be considered safe for most people.

    However, like any therapeutic practice, there are instances where caution is advised, or it may require special consideration. Here are some scenarios where healing touch could potentially pose concerns or where specific precautions should be taken:

    • Individuals with severe mental health issues, such as psychosis or severe depression. While healing touch can promote relaxation and emotional balance, it’s not a substitute for psychiatric care or medications prescribed for mental health disorders.
    • Individuals with pacemakers or other electronic medical devices. Healing touch works with the body’s energy field. Although there’s no evidence it interferes with these devices, to be safe, talk to your doctor before starting therapy if you have any electronic medical devices.
    • Individuals who’ve had recent surgery or physical injuries. Even though healing touch is gentle, some techniques might involve touching certain areas. If you’ve recently had surgery or have injuries, let the practitioner know beforehand so they can adjust the techniques if needed.
    • Cancer patients. Healing touch can be helpful, especially in managing stress and side effects from treatments. However, talk to your oncologist first to make sure healing touch fits with your overall treatment plan and let you know if there are any times to avoid it.
    • Pregnancy. It’s generally safe in this instance, but your doctor can advise you on whether it’s right for you, especially if you have any pregnancy complications.

    How much does healing touch cost?

    Healing touch sessions can cost anywhere from $50 to $100 in the U.S., but the price can vary depending on a few things.

    • The practitioner’s training,
    • Their experience, and
    • Their location.

    The good news is, some practitioners offer sliding scale fees, meaning the cost is based on your income. This makes this type of approach more affordable for everyone.

    Additionally, some healing touch programs might partner with hospitals or clinics. This means your insurance might cover some of the cost, but only if a doctor says this therapy is medically necessary for you.

    So here’s what to keep in mind before you book an appointment: ask the practitioner about their background. This includes which healing touch program they trained with. Knowing this can give you a better idea of their experience and what kind of techniques they’ll use during your sessions.

    Live Vibrantly, Naturally

    Healing touch is just one step into the realm of energy medicine. As you explore more into the side of holistic and energy therapies, you’ll find that it opens up new pathways to well and balanced life.

    Energy is the language that your body speaks,” says Donna. And if you want to better communicate with this vessel your soul lives in, you can learn how to in Mindvalley’s Energy Medicine masterclass with Donna herself as well as her husband, David Feinstein.

    Everyone has the ability to heal themselves, as Donna says. Even you.

    Welcome in.

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    Tatiana Azman

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