
Self-Treatment Course
This exclusive course offers an in-depth look at neuroplastic symptoms—why they develop, shared traits, and cutting-edge treatments. Chapters cover diagnosis, mental health links, current stressors, and adult outcomes of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs).
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Chapter 1 : Does this website apply to me?
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Part I
Most people assume that pain or illness are caused only by injury or disease. But for about 40% of people who go to a doctor, this is not the case.
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Part II
From the symptoms alone, can you tell if they are caused by disease or injury or by NS? Usually not definitively, but often there are helpful clues.
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Part III.
One of the most surprising features of NS is that patients with very different symptoms and personal backgrounds often share personality traits that can be stressful.
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Chapter 2 : From Skeptic to Advocate: Dr. Clarke’s Journey into Neuroplastic Healing
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How Dr Clarke learned about NS
If you are skeptical about any of the information in the earlier chapters, I can relate. I will share my story about this because you should know a little about the background of anyone who provides health information.
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What happened next to Dr Clarke?
The Doctor of the Year Award in 1990 led to many other physicians becoming aware of the work I was doing. Soon I was doing 90% of the 2nd opinion consultations for the Gastroenterology Department and also seeing patients with a full range of other symptoms.
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The Scientific Evidence
Whenever you hear or read advice from a “health expert,” ask yourself two questions before you begin following their recommendations.
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Chapter 3 : Diagnosing and Treating NS
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Part I: Current Stresses
NS can be diagnosed and successfully treated. That simple statement has the potential to transform the practice of medicine.
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Part II: Mental Health Conditions
Most people believe that when you suffer from Depression, an Anxiety Disorder or Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) it is obvious that you need care from a mental health professional.
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Part III: Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs)
Learning that ACEs could cause pain or illness in adults was the biggest shock of my medical education. It comes as a surprise to most patients, too, even those who suffered abuse, neglect, loss of a parent, parental alcohol or drug abuse, or other trauma.
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Chapter 4 : Treating the Long-term Impact of ACEs
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Part I: Personality Traits
Many clinicians assume that the stressful personality traits listed in Chapter 3 are not subject to change. That has not been my experience
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Part II: Low Self-Esteem
Why is a healthy self-esteem so important? For one, it is fundamental to changing the stressful personality traits in Chapter 10 that are linked to ACEs
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Part III: Unrecognized emotions
This is the single most difficult task in NS treatment: developing awareness of repressed negative emotions and then expressing them in words.
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Part IV: Triggers
One of my patients was verbally and emotionally abused by her mother for nearly fifty years. For the last fifteen of those years, she suffered debilitating attacks of dizziness and vomiting every month or two.
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