Episode 212. Holistic-ish Dentistry Meets Energy Healing: My Personal Story (Part 1)
Root canals. Bone grafting. Energy healing. Moon cycles. And a year without a back tooth.
In this candid solo episode, I walk you through the full-circle story of undoing two old root canals, healing bone loss, navigating surgical dentistry, and doing it all in my own way—blending conventional medicine with Expansion Principle energy healing, crystal support, and loads of intuitive prep work.
You’ll hear:
Why I chose to remove my root canals and what influenced my decision
How I found the right providers (yes, plural) and vetted them
The difference between the two surgeries—and why one was way more challenging than the other
How I used energy healing, moon phases, and herbal support to guide recovery
What this journey taught me about shame, teeth, motherhood, and self-trust
🦷 This is Part 1 of a 2-part series. In Part 2, I’ll be interviewing my periodontist to bring you the expert lens.
💬 Got questions you’d love me to ask him? DM me or email me ASAP!
If you’ve ever wondered what it’s really like to navigate holistic-ish dentistry—or you’re craving an honest, empowering take on healing beyond the physical—this one’s for you.
Links & Resources:
Connect with Nichole Joy on IG: https://www.instagram.com/nichole_joy__/
Try me! Schedule your complimentary 30-min chat & let’s see how I can best support you: https://nicholejoy.hbportal.co/public/64fa005ec70ae50024c65155/1-Inquiry_form
Stay in the loop & receive a free gift from me. Enter your info at the link below, and I’ll keep you posted on the book’s publishing date. Also, I’ll send you a copy of the meditation to your inbox: https://nicholejoy.kartra.com/page/bookupdates
Moon calendar: https://mooncalendar.astro-seek.com/
Rent Root Cause on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CrhyAAUNw6M
Transcript:
It's been a while, huh? Okay. We have important things to talk about, but first I have a few announcements. So number one, I want to tell you, this is part one. So in part one of this Dental Journey story, I'm gonna be telling you my side of the story, what brought me to this. Experience, why I did it, how I did it, all of those things.
Part two, I'm gonna be interviewing my periodontist and I should tell you that if this is something that is of interest to you and you listen to this episode, send me those questions for him now, like asap, and I will try to get them to him in time so that we can cover it in part two. If you're finding this after, then perhaps reach out to him directly.
The second announcement is. I have been dragging ass on moving this episode forward and talking about it, and it's for good reason and also a questionable reason. The good reason is because I've been really hyperfocused on my book, and [00:01:00] I find it really tricky to be in that creative writing zone. And still have additional creative stuff to come out of me, even if it's on the podcast. But I have been so focused on my book.
It's so close to the 50th rounds of edits. And I cannot wait to share it with you, by the way. I'll share a link in the show notes that you can sign up to get updates on when the book is ready. So please stay tuned. It is. A labor of love. , I'm excited for the book to come out, which is a strange thing to say because of the material.
, But I've learned and realized that I can hold the duality of being excited to share this really important piece of work, uh, because I know how much it will help. People and also the pain that came with the whole reason behind the book. , So in short, the book is about my healing journey with my mom.
It's not something I've ever really talked about publicly. So it's, it's a thing for me to get myself, get my head out of my own ass and write it and get comfortable sharing [00:02:00] it. , But I know it's time. So I'm pausing from that creative flow that I've been in. I have a big deadline that I wanna get this thing done, but I'm pausing because it's October 1st and I am wanting the podcast to come back to life.
I miss podcasting regularly. I have important shit that I wanna share with you.
. The not so great reason that I have been dragging on getting this episode out is because of the stigma. There is so much stigma associated with teeth and with issues with our teeth, and I'm, I'm, I'm reaching a point where I'm kind of over it.
I shared a little bit about this journey that I went on with my mouth over the last 14, 15 months, just here and there. I shared tidbits. I've had so many fellow moms commenting and fellow holistic moms, holistic minded, natural minded parents. Replying to my stories and asking questions, who did I go to?
What kind of process am I having done? People want more information. There's not a ton of information. There's especially not a ton of people [00:03:00] sharing their firsthand experiences, uh, with doing something like undoing old root canal sites. So having said all of that, I am 42 years old. I'm at an age where I'm giving less and less Fs about what the people on the internet think of me, and I'm.
Allowing the importance of the message, getting out to the people who need it to outweigh my discomfort with any stigma associated with teeth. I'm gonna actually start this story way, way back childhood. So I did not grow up in a family that. Placed high importance on dental health. My dad's Israeli in Israel in the fifties and sixties, seventies.
They just really were not focused on dental health. And as a child, I didn't go to the dentist regularly. We never had health insurance, we never had dental insurance, and I only went to the dentist when I had a lot of pain, which ended up being a root canal. They chose to have a root canal done on my mouth, and I was, I don't know, probably 10 ish years old.[00:04:00]
When I was 18 and I got my first real job and I got my first benefits package, I started going to the dentist. And what I quickly learned was that years and years and years of not really knowing how to properly care for my teeth was not the best and did not result in the best outcomes. And over the years I've been to some wonderful dentists, and I've also been to some dentists that were.
Just checking the box. And as I've gotten older and I've been on this spiritual journey and I've been on this holistic journey and I've been using energy healing more and more and more and more, uh, my body has become incredibly sensitive and that's really a byproduct of doing the level of energetic work that I do on myself and on my clients.
As my body has become more sensitive, I just cannot do many of the conventional things that I used to do. And for the context of this conversation, we're gonna talk about the, um, the work that I had done on my mouth, right? So I had one experience of a root canal when I was 10 ish. My second root canal, I had.
Within days of my son being [00:05:00] born, so if you have heard me speak about this before, I had a C-section with my son, and a few days later I stopped taking the pain management medication and as soon as their pain management medication wore off and I switched to something over the counter, I was in immense pain in my mouth.
So I had a new tooth issue that required a root canal. Fast forward multiple years. Getting into energy healing, doing some major upgrades to my system, my body's operating system, and I began to become aware and noticing different conversations on the interwebs about holistic dental care and more specifically about the potential impacts of root canals. Let's go back to around the time my mom passed, right? Not long after. I should say. I have been following this woman on social media. She's an Israeli mother of three. , Running. She was running a big.
Spa out of New York City. Her, , social media handle is [00:06:00] NOY Noy. I came across her socials one day when I was scrolling, and I really loved this one particular, , style of facial that she was offering. I didn't know anybody who offered it locally. I became fascinated with her stuff. . Eventually she shared some behind the scenes information about her battle with bone cancer.
And so I started paying closer attention and I just really felt like I connected with her for some reason. And shortly after my mom passed, I learned that she had also passed. Mind you, she was only, I wanna say late, late thirties, and I was 40 when my mom passed. Okay. So yeah, I was still 40. And so we were very close in age.
I'm a mother of three. She's a mother of three, and. When I learned that she passed, I started digging up. I, I was searching for more information, like what happened? Oh, did her bone cancer come back? I knew that she had been in remission. So I find this podcast episode she, , was a guest on the Skinny Confidential, and I don't usually watch that show, but I did watch her episode and
I began noticing, right? Things were coming into my [00:07:00] awareness. So she began sharing about her journey and sharing about while she was in remission, that one of the things that she had learned about was , that there's meridians and the teeth that connect different parts of the body.
She was drawing a connection between, , some dental work that she had had done in the past, uh, specifically root canal work and issues that she was encountering. And so she wasn't necessarily saying, and I'm not necessarily saying that root canals cause. X, Y, z I'm not a doctor. I'm not your doctor.
I'm not here to say any of that, but I, I just noticed it. I noticed it. My body became aware of, oh, this is a thing. I have root canals. I have two. Had two. So noticing that, okay. Now she mentions a documentary, it's called The Root Cause. I don't know if it's still on the interwebs at the time. I was able to rent it, I think, for a couple bucks.
, I'll try to find a link. I'll share it in the show notes for you. , I watched the documentary. And took what I felt was correct and left the rest of the door. And again, I'm noticing, I'm noticing and I'm noticing how my body is receiving the information. [00:08:00] And really, for me as a projector, it feels like a subtle invitation to an awareness.
Okay. Now, after my mom passed, not long later, I was gathering photos and videos. As I was, , put in charge of her slideshow at her service. Her husband gave me her phone, so I had her phone. Just a couple days after she passed. She's getting messages and phone calls from people, from clients, from friends who were still checking in on her and who had not yet realized that she had passed.
So maybe they were not on social media, um, or they hadn't been on their social media for a while. And in going through some of her messages. I found a chain where she was having conversations with a dentist and she had been going through the process of having some pretty substantial dental work done and was considering getting some implants, so having some extractions and other things, and then having some implants put in.
So again, this noticing coming into my awareness.
I'm not suggesting that this contributed to my mom's death. I know that my [00:09:00] mom's death was something else entirely, and that I talk about at great length in my book. But for that moment, it was something that was coming into my awareness. Again, all of these noticings, I think of them as winks, nods, nudges from God, from the universe, from the divine, who are like, Hey, pay attention to this.
Hey, pay attention to this. And I had been thinking about the root canals that were sitting in my mouth. . And if you've been following my journey for any amount of time, you know that for several years I went through a process of removing a lot of items, um, chemicals, things of that nature, and breast implants out of my body, right?
, Because with all of this work that I've been doing on my system, , my body's no longer accepting breast implants. , Hormonal birth control.
Now I am a one line in human design, so I like to gather a lot of information, and it's called the investigator line. So I am open and available to the information. I'm noticing what the invitations are that are coming in as a projector, and then I'm investigating. [00:10:00] So as I move down this journey of investigating, , I went and searched on podcasts for , holistic dentists. At the time, I didn't even know that that existed, but I had just started to become aware of it and listening to these, um, hand this handful of conversations. So I started searching for holistic dentists and functional dentistry. There were a couple of podcasts episodes that I felt like, , really spoke to me and opened me up to this whole new side of my holistic journey and, um, really going to the root cause of issues.
No pun intended, and I started exploring my local area. Come to find out, there are a handful of this type of dentists in my local area.
Okay, so the first thing I do is start making, uh, consultation appointments. I went to the first dentist and the process was like something I'd never done before, so he did a CT scan of my mouth. And one of the things that I noticed is that in doing this specific kind of investigation into your mouth, .
Insurance doesn't always [00:11:00] cover this stuff. So for the consult, insurance doesn't cover it. It's a pay out of pocket thing. And I took note of what a big deal it is that, um, probably a good portion of the population are not in a position to be able to afford the consultation. I was lucky enough to be able to go ahead and do that, have the CT scan done.
And what I noticed with this man, I sat in his chair. Number one, he never sat me back. He never did the like old fashioned, Hey, let's lean back. Can I take a look in your mouth and see what we have going on? He never examined my mouth. He only looked at the CT scan and then he handed me a $30,000 estimate almost entirely to be out of pocket.
Insurance only covers a very small portion of this kind of thing. So I thought, okay. I'm also becoming more and more aware of how and paying attention to the information that my body gives me when I'm in different environments. When I was in his office, it felt very sterile and cold. I felt like a number.
Um, I did not feel comforted, nurtured any of those things. [00:12:00] So I had two other consults scheduled. The next consult went quite well, but that particular dentist does not do. Entire process that you need when you're undoing root canals. It's a multistep process that I will do my best to explain. , But I'm gonna have my periodontist explain better in part two , where I'll be interviewing him for the sake of part one.
This is strictly my lens, my perspective.
, I really connected with that second dentist and I felt like he would be an important part of the journey because there's certain things he does and certain things that the other one do that eventually I would need them to work together. And they do actually work together with quite a lot of people in this general area.
The third dentist I went to, I liked her. , But something else that I found. , Unnerving was that she brought up a whole other range of issues that the prior two had never mentioned, and it felt very overwhelming. , And I had a bit of, I had a moment of feeling, , that the dial of my skepticism [00:13:00] was turned up a bit, that I felt a little bit more guarded when I sat in her office and I took note of that.
Noticing how my body feels. So I scheduled a fourth consult, which is the periodontist who you're gonna meet in part two. And by the way, if you have any questions, feel free to send 'em to me like ASAP so I can give them to him in time for our interview. Dentist number two referred me to meet dentist number four, who would ultimate ultimately be the one who does the extraction surgery and the implant placement, and they would work hand in hand.
So we go to dentist four's office and the first thing I am observing is how my body feels when I'm in their office. How the front desk staff made me feel from the minute I walked in the door and really going back further from the minute I made the phone call. And then when I sat down with the doctor with the periodontist, one of the first things he said, possibly even before he looked at my CT scan from the other dentist's office [00:14:00] was, I'm gonna go ahead and lean your chair back.
Can I take a look and see what we have going on here? And that's when it all clicked. This first dentist was throwing a $30,000 bill in my hand and never saw my teeth with his, like my actual teeth with his eyes. So that, and this man's 25 years, I believe, 25 years of experience focusing primarily on this.
Specific category of dentistry and his openness to not just a holistic lens of dentistry and doing extractions and implant procedures, but further than that, fully supportive of the ways that I was going to hold myself through this journey. So the way I approached this. I gotta put the tea down for this.
So the way I approached this was I need somebody who's going to do the medical side. I need somebody who has their expertise and who understands this, and who is the doctor and who's done years and years and years of this kind of [00:15:00] thing to bring in their expertise. And then on my side of the fence, what are the things that I'm going to do?
And so I envisioned us working collaboratively, and once I sat down with this periodontist, I knew that he was the one that I wanted to do the extractions. And you know, that first procedure, which I'll explain a little bit more in a moment, and the implant.
And I knew that I would be working with dentist number two on the parts of the process that he specializes in. So the cap, uh, sorry, the crown placement.
So next I wanna move into a little bit of a behind the scenes of how I prepared for the first surgery. Okay. So when you are undoing old root canals, I had two. One from when I was probably 10 years old as a child, we never went to the dentist. We never had dental insurance. I only went under that one situation when I needed a root canal because I was in excruciating pain and it was very traumatic to me at the time.
The second one was when my first child, my son was a [00:16:00] couple days old. As soon as the C-section medicine were off, my mouth was something else that was root canal number two. So I'm going into this first procedure and the first part of it in undoing the root canals is obviously taking off the crown, extracting the dead tooth,
clearing the infection, and they use a combination of, I believe ozone therapy and a PRF process, which I will ask him to explain through the medical lens in more detail for you. And then for me, bone grafting. So for a lot of reasons of which I believe certain hormonal birth controls contributed to, um, quite a bit of bone density loss in my jawbone over the years.
So I did not have all of that to say. I did not have enough jawbone to hold an implant yet. So part of this process wasn't just taking out [00:17:00] these two dead teeth. Lucky for me, they were in the same spot, on the same part of, , my mouth. It was also grafting, so taking some kind of bone material and filling it into my jaw in hopes that my jawbone would use it to help heal and grow and build out my jawbone.
First things up was scheduling the procedure. When it came time to schedule. The front office was so supportive of me relying on the astrology. More specifically, I was looking at the phases of the moon cycle as one of my friends suggested. And again, I went as the investigator and researched why we are doing this, and it made perfect sense to me.
The moon cycle shifts every day. And if you have dabbled in astrology at all, of which I'm no expert, but I do feel like a lot of it resonates with me in certain phases of the moon. It's just astrologically more [00:18:00] supportive to having, um, optimal surgical outcomes. We'll say it that way.
I found this website that goes through every stage of the moon for the next year, two years, however many years. So you can look at the schedule, look at the calendar, and see what dates you have. Planetary support. Now I get that this is not always possible given schedules, given days off, given emergency procedures.
But in this particular example, it was really important to me, um, that I felt held on every level. . I felt held by my periodontist. I felt held by the energy healing work that I do and that I was gonna use on my side of the fence I felt held by the planets.
Then in preparing for the procedure, one of the things that I discussed with my periodontist is that I would be working with the material that he was going to use in my mouth. Specifically using the energy healing modality that I am a practitioner with. , And that's EP expansion principle. I was gonna be using EP to tune into [00:19:00] this material
of which we were using a combination of cadaver and synthetic material. I would tune into the material, infuse it with ep, tune into my mouth, into my jaw space, also infuse it with ep, and then let my body know what's going to happen and ask my body to make friends with this material that's there.
Support me.
And the thing is, when I shared all of this with him, all of the things I would be doing on my side of the fence, I didn't get the deer in the headlights look. He was fully supportive of whatever I wanted to do on my side
of this collaborative effort.
Now as the surgery date got closer, , I decided to have the experience before having the experience. So what that means is. A visualization technique where I go into a sort of meditative state and I visualize, in my mind's eye the full experience of having this first surgery done before I even physically [00:20:00] arrive at the dentist's office. And I've done things like this loads and loads of times in the past.
Um, I think the first big example I had was when I was preparing for my first vbac, and I used to play the visualization in my mind before bed of what my ideal VBAC would be like. At the time I wasn't using ep, but now. I have that as a tool in my toolkit, and so I infused this whole situation with ep.
I wrapped the room that I was going to be having the procedure in. Now, something else that I've also come to understand in my studies as an energy healing practitioner is that there is information stored in our teeth. And as part of the surgery day, I infused the areas where they were working because even when the physical tooth is gone, something I've learned through my mentor through EP is that even when the physical tooth is gone, the energy of the tooth is still present.
So we had the physical body, we had the energetic body, right? And so I infused and [00:21:00] continued to saturate these spaces with EP throughout the healing process. So that first surgery day was July 1st, 2024. ,
I will say the procedure went very quickly. Pretty seamless. I think that the staff was impressed that I, or confused about why I wanted to document the process, why I was taking photos and some videos. , In my head I wanted to show my kids an example of what can happen when you grow up and , nobody's encouraging you to brush and floss properly every day.
The surgery went really well. They had a special touch, which I thought was glorious, which was just this satin mask that they put over my eyes and it made me feel like I was asleep even though I was awake. Um, but I had taken some drug that they gave me to kind of soothe my system and calm my nerves.
Obviously I didn't drive myself and I felt like I was asleep, and it felt like when I stood up and it was time to go, it felt like five minutes had gone by. They sent me home with a really incredible [00:22:00] package of holistic products to support the healing. There was a nasal rinse. I remember. , I couldn't sneeze or blow my nose for something like two to three weeks because of the bone grafting.
That's really difficult for me. One of the other suggestions that, that the periodontist highly, highly recommended was using.
The antibiotic amoxicillin during the healing, he felt like, yes, there's lots of things you can do. You can choose to do whatever you like, which I really appreciated. It felt very much like the in informed consent that we hear about in the birth world. It was like the informed consent of the dental world.
He presented me with all of these options, um, and really suggested amoxicillin if it was something I was comfortable with. And while I don't love taking antibiotics and I don't take them very often in something like this, I felt comfortable doing that. The thing is, I hadn't taken amoxicillin since I was 14 and at that time, and my body had a crazy allergic reaction.
I broke out in hives all over my body. So for I. [00:23:00] I don't know, 28 years. So for 28 years I had been checking allergic to amoxicillin on all of my medical records. I had this conversation with the doctor, and one of the things that he offered is for me to try taking just a couple to see how my body would respond before the surgery date.
Also, something I was comfortable with on my side of the fence. What felt really good to do was to tune into my body. Let it know what's happening. Let my body know that we're gonna try out this medication and that it can make friends with the medication. I tuned into the medication as well to the amoxicillin and I asked the medicine and my body to make friends so that my body can receive the healing that the medicine will provide.
I didn't have an allergic reaction, so I was pretty excited about that.
Now I go home. That first procedure, the recovery was tricky For several days I was very tender and eating only mostly [00:24:00] liquids, not super hot, and really, uh, favoring that side. I will say that that first stage of this year long experience, that first procedure was my least favorite, and the healing part of that was not my favorite. But what I kept telling myself was, I'm healing. I'm healing, I'm healing, I'm healing. And anytime I did the mouthwashes, anytime I was rubbing the gel inside my mouth, I was continuing to reinforce the fact that we're healing, we're healing, we're healing, and I stayed focused on the healing.
Infusing myself with ep. Regularly throughout this process. And then I also found myself a howlight choker, . Howlight is a crystal that is associated , , with healing bone.
I also found a bone healing herbal supplement that I ordered online,
and again, just tuning into my bones, into my dental cavity regularly to focus on the healing.
Now, fast forward five months, so five months later they did another check and the [00:25:00] bone healed enough to go through with the next phase, which would be the second procedure as part of this journey.
And that is placing the implant. So if you remember, I had two sites where the teeth were extracted. Lucky for me, they were in the very back, and so they were hardly noticeable. But I did go for almost a full year before I finally got the one tooth put back in. I'll explain that. So in in early December, which was that five month, , mark, I was able to have the implant placed.
In preparation for that procedure, I did something very similar. I had the experience before having the experience. I tuned in to my body. I tuned into my dental cavity and asked it to receive. The implant. I tuned into the implant and asked it to make friends with my body, and I utilized the expansion principle, energy healing, [00:26:00] to bring the two together in a very coherent way.
And I was pleasantly surprised at the healing experience after that second surgery. So I thought placing this implant,. It looks like a huge screw going into your jaw, and the idea just made me cringe and I was pretty anxious about it. But again, I used EP to soothe my nerves and the medication from the doctor.
But I was pleasantly surprised that the healing part of the second procedure was like a walk in the park. I was tender just for that day, but by the next day I felt so much better. I had no swelling, and the only odd sensation was for several months because now it had to heal again in order to support a crown for several months.
I had the butt end of. The implant sticking out of my jawbone. And lucky for me, again, it was so [00:27:00] far back if you're in my real life and you saw it. No, you didn't.
But then again, I had to walk around for another, it took another seven months before I could get the tooth, the new tooth. . So five months later, about may I go back to the periodontist.
He does another scan and reviews my mouth, checks the bone, checks the implant. All is cleared for a tooth. His particular office doesn't do the tooth. So I went back to dentist number two, I wanna say the next day to be fitted for. This new crown that they were going to order for me. And then that took several weeks to come in.
So finally in July of 2025, just over a year after I started this whole journey, I got my crown. I got my crown. And to be honest, I mean the very, very, very back one I didn't put a crown on because you'll, you would never see it, and it really doesn't [00:28:00] matter.
So I have been dragging in sharing this episode, and I know that it's in part because of how much editing I'm doing and how my creative bandwidth is at capacity. I also know that I've been dragging because there's a lot of stigma associated with teeth and with the mouth, and it is a thing even as a 40 something year old woman, who's pretty damn sure of myself and at this point give gives less and less FS about what other peoples think, it is still a thing to be walking around in the world, missing a tooth.
Even if it's near the back, and I'll say that in this full year, I became hyper aware of and compassionate toward the people who have to walk around every day. Dealing with dental, health, dental issues because it is so financially out of [00:29:00] reach for so many and I'm not proposing , that I know the solution to this.
I don't. Um, I just know that dental insurance is a joke and for something like this, it covered a very small portion of the extractions. And I believe a lot of that was because I had infection. It covered some of the infection clean out, but then it doesn't cover anything to put a tooth back in , dental insurers are basically like, that's all aesthetic. We don't care if you walk around toothless, ,
so I say all of that to say that I recognize what a privilege it is to be able to have these kinds of conversations and. I, I'm need motivation in human design. And so all of this made me realize that there's such a need to have these conversations on a broader scale to start chipping away the stigma because it's bullshit.
So many of us are dealing with dental, health stuff that we do not talk about publicly. I have shared tidbits of my journey over the last year, like very small amounts, and every time I've [00:30:00] discussed the dental stuff and the holistic dentistry and the functional medicine, all this. I get loads of people replying and talking to me in dms that they also wanna have the root canal stuff undone.
That they also want to take out old silver fillings that they also want, but they're, nobody's talking about this publicly because it is, it's for whatever reason, become a thing that our society has deemed to be shameful, that if you don't have perfect teeth.
As I've done in every other area of my business, what I decided is that.
The need for this message to get out to people in my community, the need to have this level of discussion, part one, my version, part two, is gonna be when I interview my periodontist and answer your questions, outweighs my discomfort associated with being a toothless baddie for about a year
I mean, I looked like a real life witch.
So all of that to say, I hope you found this helpful, and if you have [00:31:00] specific questions for my periodontist, he is based in St. Petersburg , , please send them over, send 'em my dm, send 'em to my Facebook Messenger, email me. I think that there's even a feature on Spotify if you watch this on Spotify that you can, , reply to the episode or leave a comment.
So feel free to do that and I will get your comments and gather them. I would love to get them to him, ASAP, so that I have them ready before we sit down for our conversation next week.
I also really wanted to highlight the importance of. Not, this just really mirrors other categories of life right now, doesn't it? The importance of not deciding that you're either for conventional, conventional dentistry as a whole, or for holistic functional dentistry as a whole. It's actually okay to kind of fuse whatever you feel correct with.
I took. Prescription meds on the way to the dentist's office to calm and settle my nerves. I also used EP throughout the whole process, the energy healing modality, and I also , used a whole. Collection of [00:32:00] holistic healing support and I took amoxicillin, you are allowed to pick and choose and create the experience that works best for you.
I mean, it's like that in birth, that we tell people you don't have to do everything a certain way. You can do what feels correct for you. You can get an epidural and then ask them to not. Clamp the umbilical cord for 60 to 90 seconds or whatever you choose.
I think the important thing here is having the free will and knowing that it is your free will to make choices that best support you, not anybody else.
And by all means, if you would like to show some solidarity, feel free to comment. Send me a note, send me something, telling me that I am not the only one out here.
And then in wrapping up, I also wanna invite you into energy healing. This is something that you've heard me talk about. I'm gonna continue talking about it in coming episodes, in the various capacities I've been using it on. I have not taken a year and a half off since my mom died. I have been working, I just haven't been working [00:33:00] publicly facing.
I've only shared a few podcast episodes and I've only shared a little bit of my work. However, I have been working mostly utilizing new ways to use EP on my friends, on my children, on myself, and on clients. So having said that, , if you're not sure if energy healing is something that can be supportive to whatever it is that you're going through in your life at this moment, try me.
Send me a dm, send me a message, talk to me. Tell me what you're dealing with. You can apply the link in the show notes if you like, and we'll have a conversation. Tell me what you're working with and I will tell you how energy healing can support you. It doesn't mean you have to work with me, you can work with whoever you choose, or no one at all if you choose that.
But if you're serious about changing your life, changing your experience, and utilizing your free will to make the decisions that best support you. EP may be a tool that can be super helpful to you, so reach out, let's have a conversation, [00:34:00] and I hope you have a wonderful week.