What's The Meaning Behind Endometriosis

Today I’m answering a follower question… I had full permission to share all the ins and outs as I can be blunt, direct and sometimes it comes across a bit negative… her question is below… this masterclass invitation. If you are listening live and want to join me for a FREE LIVE masterclass The Missing Link To Activate Healing: For those with chronic health conditions that don’t respond to conventional or alternative treatment. You’ll learn: 💜 The root cause that even the best specialists and practitioners don’t address 💜 How and why you store emotions that show up as undesirable manifestations 💜 How to work out the underlying emotions behind your experience 💜 The fastest way to find out the message your chronic health condition has for you​ 💜 The mistake that people make when it comes to emotional processing Sign up here https://theartoflisteningtoyourbody.com/live-masterclass I finally got a diagnosis of endo, which has actually helped me understand sooo many root causes for many of my physical issues (and some mental!) and I’m having hysterectomy, oophorectomy (as lots of benign things growing in my ovaries) and endo excision in a month 😅… and then I feel like I have a clean slate to start with… but endo is a chronic illness, and I don’t want it to grow more. I am aware of the Estrogen growth factor, and hormones etc, and I understand the lifestyle requirements (anti inflammatory approach etc) BUT I want to know the emotions behind it all, why it might have formed in the first place, and if there’s (I’m sure there is) more deep emo work I need to process and work through to stop it coming back, and enveloping me like it currently is. I’m hoping for an entire new freedom once I’ve healed.. From surgery, but as I say, I want to know why it grew. Im also PCOS girly - so maybe you feel inclined to do a poddy on the womb and all its issues… as my uterus is double the size it should be as well. I know uterus is the ‘creative’ part of my body, and I’ve processed the grief of loosing it, but I’m certain I’ll be more creative once I have energy, no constant nausea, less pain, bloating, IBS and hideous fatigue!!

Om Podcasten

Jin Ong is medical intuitive, pattern hunter, theme breaker and messenger of truth. Trained professionally as an osteopath, psychosomatic therapist, western medical acupuncturist and herbalist. She has worked with thousands of clients. She started two bricks and mortar clinics she later went on to sell to move into the online space as a coach + mentor. She is the creator of the Release Process ® and host of The Art Of Listening To Your Body Podcast. Jin works with complex physical and emotional conditions that don’t respond to traditional or conventional therapies, including surgery. Her work also includes those with cancer, autoimmune conditions and fertility issues. She is a strong believer that your body is a manifestation of your emotional state. The experiences, events and traumas in your life are associated with an emotion that wants to be expressed and released at the time. If you don’t know how to express or rather you suppress because that emotion is inconvenient, it gets stored in your body as a source of stress. You can compensate until you can’t anymore. When it all gets too much, your body presents with physical issues: pain, injury, illness, disease; mental imbalances: anxiety, depression that overtakes your life and fears and phobias; behavioural dysfunction: addiction, excess control and discipline; as well as recurring issues playing out in your life. You don’t need to end up at this crisis point. Jin weaves in the practical and the woo to intuitively read your body and decipher the messages it has for you. Most importantly she facilitates a deeply cathartic and transformational process to empty out your emotional cup, create space for more and manifest the life you truly desire. She loves to dig deep, speak about the unspoken, and help you process unresolved emotions that hold them back from living the life you truly want. It all starts with getting comfortable with discomfort and speaking about the unspoken.