TNR Happenings, March 25, 2024

The Grief Retreat Is On May 17th & 18th
It’s official. The mailers describing the training go out today. Kenny Smoker will be facilitating this event with me for the first time ever. This will be the most adventurous, exciting, and advanced training I have ever created, bar none. But Dr. Kevin, I don’t have any grief, sorrow, trauma or loss, I have a perfect life. I also don’t have any practice members, a spouse, family, or friends who are in a dark place and won’t allow me to help them. After a certain point in life, the landscape changes, and I won’t lie to you, this isn’t for everybody. TNR is not for everybody, either. The world of ordinary or the world of essence, it’s your choice. This is a capped event and is expected to sell out very quickly.

Love Has No Color News
Kenny wants to make this year’s Fun Days the best, and the Grief Retreat weekend is the perfect time to discuss the Fun Days’ activities with him, make suggestions, and give him feedback. He will be separated from his ever-ringing and pinging phone and fully present when in Boston. If you have ever had Kenny all to yourself, even for a few moments, you have felt his magic. There is nobody like him and he is super excited about sharing his unique gifts and skills with us at the Grief Retreat.
From the Mind of Miyagi

Sometimes, doesn’t it seem like you are herding cats when dealing with the negativity and closed-mindedness of practice members? They appear too ready to share their tales of woe with anyone who listens. Yet when you speak of the commitment it will take to move them towards health, they bring out their book of excuses or move away from you like you have leprosy. Know this: there is a real person buried underneath. It’s our job not only to do the X’s and O’s of doctoring and healing but also to plunge into forming a sacred relationship with a person protecting and defending the problem. “It’s my disease; it’s rare and has my real doctors baffled; I am special.” They parade themself on Facebook with all the other brainwashed members of the world of ordinary and brag about how special they are with their disease. They even show their certificates of authenticity by saying how sick and special they are with their cancer, covid, disease, etc.
This is so counterintuitive to health. Our society is obsessed with sickness, disease, and lack; people are recognized for being sick, special, and worthy of individualized attention and sympathy from the masses, not only people they know. WOW! It’s always my disease, a celebrity disease, a government-endorsed disease, a research-sponsored disease, etc. Why would we reward and throw money at the seemingly bottomless pit of human suffering? There is profit in prolonging illness, not resolving it. Why are there organizations dedicated to sick people instead of people who have regained their health?
So many low-resonating people have an absolute lack of gratitude for their life. They moan about all the things they don’t have and forget to be grateful for the things they do have. As I sat here last night (Sunday) with a Miracle Training client who was shaken to his core and is fighting to claim his life back, I was in awe of the gravity of the circumstances so many people find themselves in. Taking the mystery of life for granted is the natural state in the life of the ordinary. A world of sick, subluxated, dim light bulbs produces a world of war, pollution, rape, crime, and people who will eliminate themselves rather than endure such a world.
Go the extra mile for your patients. Your office is more than a place of healing aches and sprains. It’s a community, a container for people to dip into health, start seeing their lives differently, and start treating people kindly and with compassion. Stop hiding behind insurance coverage and accepting excuses for not participating in regaining health. Don’t hide in your offices; blend with your community and tell people you can help. This is no time to be shy or worried about what a disease-oriented person will think of you.
DCME Confidential

Question 1: Working so intensively with Level 2/DCME cases wears me down. Should I expect this?
Answer: Yes. Working with these patients takes more time and energy, but it is well worth it.
Question 2: Do all people who find themselves in the fight of their lives (Level 2/DCME) have grief, sorrow, trauma, and loss at their core?
Answer: This invisible ingredient baffles doctors and ushers people into a lifestyle of hopping from doctor to doctor. This is the lifestyle of disease. My current client has been to approximately 26 different doctors, had two lockdowns at residential facilities, has taken many psychotropic drugs along with self-medication, and is no closer to a resolution than ten years ago.
Marley