About

For most of us, during our childhood, we develop negative beliefs…

…and ideas about ourselves that influence, our behaviours, dominate our internal dialogue and cause a multitude of health issues as we step into our adult lives..

As I stepped into my teens and then into my adult life, I always felt I was not as smart as those around me. And because I believed I wasn’t as smart as others, I felt I had to work harder than everyone else – I found myself working harder and longer and still feeling like nothing was ever good enough.

So I know what it feels like to feel highly anxious and overwhelmed by work.

To feel so stressed out that you feel you are constantly struggling in your mind, unable to wind down and relax. Feeling completely stuck. Losing confidence in yourself – having an upset gut, awful reflux – losing trust in your body. Desperately wanting to make a change in your life but being dominated by fear.

I needed help – counselling and medications weren’t working– that’s when I found Rapid Transformational Therapy – in one session I had a profound turn around – my anxiety levels reduced profoundly, I started sleeping better , my irritable gut symptoms resolved – I got my life back – I got my power back – I felt truly transformed!

I had found my new life’s purpose – to be able to help others to heal their lives moving forward by understanding their past.

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At the age of 12, I noticed that caring for others seemed to be a natural part of my makeup…

…and at that age I decided when I grew up I wanted to be a nurse. Many years later, here I am as a Critical care trained registered nurse with many years of experience working in remote Aboriginal communities, island resorts, regional and metropolitan hospitals around Australia and in Canada. I’m also a wildlife carer – having nurtured and released over 20 orphaned wallabies over the past 13 years.

Around 10 years ago I recall looking at patient’s files (yes ‘files’ – there were 7 of them!) . I began to realise that for this patient , and for many others, their health issues and being in hospital, wasn’t an accident – but rather a series of daily decisions. Oor you might call them ‘indecisions’  around their lifestyle choices – food, exercise, stress management, habits like smoking and drinking etc. They just were not prioritising their health or taking responsibility for their health. It wasn’t that they didn’t know that these things were important – it was more that they were conditioned to behave in certain ways – and didn’t believe they could change.

I knew personal development had helped me. So, I started practicing meditation. I still managed to find myself in a high anxiety state and stuck.

And now? I have now found a tool to help ordinary people to become extraordinary; to help people out of the chronic health pathway that so many follow.

Sue

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