Mrs. Shruti Parashar, is a Reiki Master Practioner in Usui Shiki Ryoho Reiki since 2002. She has practiced crystal healing and taught Reiki for personal healing, recuperation post ailments, Goal Setting and Chakra Balancing. Crystal healing is about finding the intuitive resonance of crystals...
As so rightly affirmed by Reiki Grandmaster Dishaa, a young and dynamic lady, an M.B.A turned natural healing expert from Chandigarh (India) for whom life has always been a 'Love for the Moment' which is beautiful yet compassionate...
I obtained an understanding of the human life and its joys and sorrows, how the body functions/dysfunctions and so on. I also came to awareness of the fact that the delicate balance between health and disease has a lot more than just being limited to the physical to it, its physiological aspects were just manifestations...
Dr. Sachitra is an Author, Corporate Trainer, Law of Attraction Expert, Certified Hypnotherapist, NLP Practitioner, Motivational Speaker, Wellness, Success, Business & Life Coach. Dr. Sachitra was also conferred Rashtriya Vikas Ratna Award on Leadership...
Amanpreet Nagpal is an efficient, conscientious and caring counselor with extensive knowledge of facilitating empowerment, rehabilitation and guidance to clients who have experienced trauma and hardship.
Malvika is an Access Consciousness Bars facilitator, Access Consciousness Body Process facilitator, Life coach, Counselor, Healer, Distant Healer, Healer for relationship issues, Grief, Loss, Fear, Depression, Health, Pain and Emotional issues.
Co - founded by four spiritual entrepreneurs, Soul Route is one of its kind life empowerment & transformation center offering full range of psychotherapy & alternative life enhancing services aimed at cultivating healthy & successful lifestyles.
Satvakirani is a decade old healing firm located in Mumbai specializing in core cause elimination issues through deep-rooted alternative healing modalities therapies and workshops. Satvakirani is managed by Kavita Israni and her son Veejay Israani
Are you trying to quit smoking? Beat an addiction? Stick with a diabetes management regimen? Maybe motivational counseling could help.
Motivational counseling helps people who lack adequate motivation to engage in a process of changing harmful or unhealthy behaviors. It is based on principles of motivational psychology, and is designed to produce rapid, internal motivation to change. Motivational strategies mobilize the client's current and potential resources in the change process.
Treatment often doesn't work because individuals aren't adequately motivated. For example, about 80 percent of smokers lack sufficient motivation to succeed in treatment. This helps the client work through his ambivalence and discover his own motivation for change. This therapy helps him make a personal commitment to invest in the process. Motivational counseling has been used successfully in the treatment of addictions and eating disorders. More recently it has been used to help patients with chronic illnesses, such as diabetes and asthma, follow their treatment plans.
Through this process the client is able to see "discrepancies" in his life. In other words, he can see conflicts associated with problem behaviors in terms of his personal goals and values. Counselors assist clients in expressing discrepancies in their own words, and encourage them to voice their objections to change.
When resistance is met, counselors are trained to "roll with" it rather than confront it directly. By continuing to ask open-ended questions in non-judgmental language, counselors can help clients begin to identify why they resist making seemingly healthy lifestyle changes.
Self-efficacy is an important concept of this counseling. It is the belief that one has the ability to take charge of certain aspects of one's life. Many clients resist change because they lack this belief or lack the knowledge necessary to move forward with treatment.
With motivational counseling, interactions with health care providers are collaborative and collegial, not authoritative or confrontational. It empowers patients, identifies barriers to change, encourages reachable goals and, most importantly, increases treatment participation.