Improved brain functioning leads to...
Peak Performance, Pain-Relief,
Joy & Enthusiasm
Dear Friend,
Tell
me if this at all sounds familiar…
Karen
is in her 50s and works a desk job. Her
weight’s okay, she’s reasonably active, but she is “feeling her age.”
She’s
none too happy about it.
Her
neck and shoulders are often tight, joints can ache, and overall stiffness can
cause her to wince just getting out of her chair.
The
days that are really frustrating are when she cannot even reach her shoes to
tie her laces.
Know
anybody like that? What would your advice be?
Would
it be, “Try harder. Stretch! Stretch! Stretch!”?
That
was my first thought. But I was wrong.
It’s
probably not the worst advice you could give her, but that’s not the core
problem. It is not stretching.
It's not the muscle's fault.
It's the brain's!
You
see, no matter what Karen tries, she’s stiff and can’t stretch because the
problem is not in her muscles (and it’s not her age!).
The
problem is in her brain.
Her
brain has forgotten how to “feel” parts of her body, her back, hips, and
certain connections, because of a lifetime of unconscious movement.
The
brain just becomes no longer aware of those parts. It cannot successfully
direct the muscles to move in certain ways.
Your
brain is doing the same thing.
But
if you show your brain how to “perceive differences” a miracle can happen.
Your
nonconscious mind will begin perceiving in all dimensions, which gets it the
information it needs to map the body. It helps evolve your ability to think,
feel, and move freely once again…just like in your younger days.
Let
us show you simple movements that will immediately give your brain this new
ability. Yes, immediately! You will see superfast results. And we will show it
to you free of charge.
My mind-blowing experience
Over
the past two years it became more difficult, even painful, for me to sit in the
cross-leg position. And I’ve sat cross-legged to meditate for years. It was
second nature. But something changed.
I tried everything from qigong to yoga to chiropractic, and it seemed to be
getting worse and worse.
Then a woman named Anat Baniel, who I had known for 10 years, offered to guide me through her simple movements. Within 20 minutes I was sitting cross-legged without pain
or discomfort! In just 20 minutes!!
Here’s her technical explanation: The human being always works as one system. When you want to improve, you have to address all aspects of yourself and provide the
information for the brain to map and organize on an increasingly more complex
and skillful level your movement, thinking, feeling, and emotions.
In other words: If you want to improve your ability to tie your own shoelaces
(or sit cross-legged), it is important to bring your whole body and the rest of
the self into the action to access more fully the remarkable capacities for healing,
learning, and growing. We all possess these capacities already! We need to access them.
If you just work at trying to bend over, most likely you’ll find your improvement
to be limited and you might begin experiencing pain in the process.
You have to do a wide variety of gentle movements that include all the body. You
have to consciously become aware of your entire body and how it feels and
moves. Then, when you have the brain perceiving differences and integrating
more parts of yourself, the improvement is fast and transformational.
Anat
Baniel will teach you these movements, which is called NeuroMovement, free of
charge. I’ll tell you how you can do it in a bit.
This improved brain functioning leads to
Peak Performance
Doing
the movements leads to growth and improvement of brain functioning.
With
this method you don’t try to change behavior, but you help upgrade the
functioning of your brain itself to become a more skilled brain.
A
more skilled brain means performing at peak efficiency, because any skill
requires continued process of differentiation, refinement, and increased
complexity in the brain.
With
a better, stronger brain, positive changes occur in all aspects of your life that
otherwise may not be possible.
So,
yes, doing these simple movements can help heal traumatic injuries to the aches
and pains of daily life to reaching new levels of performance no matter your
profession or avocation.
Competitive
Athlete – Musician
Corporate
Executive – Writer – Artist
Computer
Coder – Welder – Race Car Driver
You can quickly and pleasurably go to heightened
levels of performance
while inspiring greater creativity and ease in both body and mind.
This improved brain functioning leads to
Pain-Relief
If
you suffer from chronic pain…
If
you have increased aches and pains…
If
you are recovering from injury…
You can rapidly help relieve pain from injuries, chronic back pain, neck pain,
joint pain, and problems from repetitive movements... returning you
to a state of maximum harmony, ease, and pleasure in the body—and higher
performance.
This improved brain functioning leads to
Joy & Enthusiasm
Do your days seem like every other day?
Do your dreams no longer matter?
It’s easy to get in a rut. By doing these simple movements, you wake up your brain,
revitalize your life, begin to recognize possibilities, and have the vitality to explore them.
This means better relationships, increased fitness and well-being, better health,
more vitality and vigor, and a new lease on life.
Simply doing these movements with attention that gave me back the ability to sit cross-legged in 20 minutes.
Science now shows that by activating the brain, we can continue to positively evolve
and transform physically, mentally, and emotionally to experience a general increase
in overall performance, energy, and enthusiasm.
I don’t know about you, but I want that…
Here's how to get it Free
Get your Free Pass today. Then, join us on November 12 when we will stream the sessions from Anat Baniel's NeuroMovement: Whole Body Fitness.
We are thrilled to make this free opportunity available to you with Anat. You will be able to show your brain how to "perceive differences" and successfully direct the muscles to move in certain ways.
For your personal best,
Pete Bissonette
President