About this episode
On today’s show Kate joined us again. We hope to feature her on a regular basis, at least two times a month if not more. Her schedule is very busy and it’s a challenge to get her on the show, even though she really wants to be.
If you would like to see her on the show more often, just let us know! 🙂
Kate shared her recent experience going to her OBGYN medical doctor who promptly told her she was a “bad patient.”
Can you imagine demeaning your customer like that? But it’s totally accepted and most patients blindly put their trust in medical doctors. In so doing, they subjugate themselves to the whims and controls of their doctor.
As if a doctor could know your body more than you can.
It’s a widespread tactic to try to confuse you, insult you or dis-empower a patient as much as possible. If a patient feels helpless and out of control that’s where a power vacuum happens and the doctor is right there to assume the role of being “in charge” of your health.
In point of fact, we are our own doctors. We are 100% completely responsible for our own health. Any doctor is not responsible for how our health is or how healthy we are.
Ultimate health freedom comes when we put into practices simple daily disciplines that empower us physically, spiritually and emotionally.
So Kate’s experience at the OBGYN was pretty comical and we discussed that on today’s show.
We also talked about why we should make better health decisions. Should we improve our health because we’re scared of getting cancer or should we improve our health to see what our human potential is?
With every new habit and change we make to our lifestyles, it’s important to have a handful of motivating reasons to stick with our good habits.
One day you might avoid pizza because you’re afraid of getting cancer or how your digestion will be after you consume it. The next week your motivating factor could be that pizza doesn’t help fulfill your calling in life. Pizza isn’t going to get you to become a superhero. Pizza isn’t going to help you reach your highest potential.
We need both negative and positive reasons behind the health choices we make. If we have multiple motivations, then we can use negative or positive in the moment we have to decide.
This helps us have a full quiver of both negative and positive motivational reasons behind our choices. It’s important to have these reasons in your mind at all times so you can pull from them at will.
If you’re struggling with a food addiction, sit down and write out all the motivating reasons you’d like to avoid those foods. Once you have an ethos or a standard to live by, you can then think of those the next time you’re tempted to eat poorly.
For me I’m motiva