thank you for sharing this❤️ i had a hurt throat chakra for months this year in spring. it felt like being strangled and hot. now i get it every time when i only think about meeting people where i cannot speak my truth. but now i can feel my anger and isolation, and then it goes away
Yes, the throat is connected to the heart literally by the strip of muscles that move our tongue, so what we say is directly related to what's in our heart . When we don't say what we feel, there's a real blockage of those unsaid words and it causes all kinds of symptoms. I had a similar experience to yours , unexpressed grief that I couldn't even admit to myself, causing illness , and only finally letting the tears overwhelm me dissolved the illness. Sometimes saying what we want may not be possible directly, but letting the tears out is the next best thing , they are literally a water solution , a flow of feelings. Or just acknowledging our true feelings is a relief, if tears are not necessary-, like writing, art, etc.
Thank you so much for this comment. I loved your point about the throat and heart having a literal connection. Thank you for sharing your throat chakra story. We really are all in this together.x
@@karenrynenberg138 I hope that throat eases soon. Our bodies always beat the brunt until we get the message. Expressing things consciously to ourselves works the magic. Xx
...and look at you now: You're a great story-teller. My mother told me that I needed to learn how to "bite my tongue", because I was a bit impulsive and un-restrained with what I thought and felt. Nevertheless, when I began doing throat chakra work, I found a lot of debris to remove (breathing in through the front of my neck and out through the back). Although I spoke (and rebelled) a lot, I was not getting to inner feelings deep enough to evoke a catharsis. I have found it an on-going process, and have no doubt that much of the stagnation is from genetic memory. How do you get on with your throat chakra now? Thanks so much for sharing your story.
Like yours, my throat chakra is very much a work in progress. I guess while we are here, it always will be. Paul, your breathing technique is a real gift to the group. I shall use it. Thank you so much for sharing your story too. I feel it's the tip of the iceberg of the wisdom held by this group.xx
@@Cronezonetarot If you'd like to read more about that technique that I use, you might want the book Working With Your Chakras by Ruth White. By-the-way, what should I call you?
@@PaulWhitcomb-ty6md Hi Paul, thanks for the book detailsI which have gone straight on my Christmas list. Ialways used to say my name at the start of videos, it's Lyn. I'll try to say it more often. I hadn't realised I was being a little anonymous.
Very interesting to hear your story, and I've had throat issues a few times in my life, so I can relate to your experience. I've learned a bit about how it's psychosomatic. (Also, I was hoping that you were going to say that after you cried and felt better, you were able to get up, take another car and follow your husband and son to the university ! 🥹) 🩵
Hi, Miranda, thanks for adding to this stream of heart-felt comments. We all share such similar ground of experience, don't we? It took me some time to process what had happened and find my legs again. Just as well, or I may have turned up like some dreadful mother from Greek Tragedy, disheveled, with ravaged, tear-stained face. I eventually had a bath and a cup of tea and phoned later. X
@@Cronezonetarot Ah...yes...it's understandable that you needed some time after that. And you're right I suppose, about maybe turning up like some "dreadful mother" etc...😂. I love your description...hahaha...especially since I happen to be Greek. Actually lots of drama like that still happens with Greeks. We're so intense, like many Mediterranean people. I was just wishing that you could be more fulfilled by being there with them after all, but a bath and tea must have been quite soothing, not to mention realizing what had happened to you.
thank you for sharing this❤️
i had a hurt throat chakra for months this year in spring. it felt like being strangled and hot.
now i get it every time when i only think about meeting people where i cannot speak my truth. but now i can feel my anger and isolation, and then it goes away
The responses here are real treasure. We connect and understand ourselves and all we share when we exchange stories like this. Thank you so much.x
Yes, the throat is connected to the heart literally by the strip of muscles that move our tongue, so what we say is directly related to what's in our heart . When we don't say what we feel, there's a real blockage of those unsaid words and it causes all kinds of symptoms. I had a similar experience to yours , unexpressed grief that I couldn't even admit to myself, causing illness , and only finally letting the tears overwhelm me dissolved the illness. Sometimes saying what we want may not be possible directly, but letting the tears out is the next best thing , they are literally a water solution , a flow of feelings. Or just acknowledging our true feelings is a relief, if tears are not necessary-, like writing, art, etc.
Thank you so much for this comment. I loved your point about the throat and heart having a literal connection. Thank you for sharing your throat chakra story. We really are all in this together.x
Thank you. Have a sore throat now and can now see where I have let this happen. Another mother held in emotion. ❤
@@karenrynenberg138 I hope that throat eases soon. Our bodies always beat the brunt until we get the message. Expressing things consciously to ourselves works the magic. Xx
❤@@Cronezonetarot
...and look at you now: You're a great story-teller. My mother told me that I needed to learn how to "bite my tongue", because I was a bit impulsive and un-restrained with what I thought and felt.
Nevertheless, when I began doing throat chakra work, I found a lot of debris to remove (breathing in through the front of my neck and out through the back). Although I spoke (and rebelled) a lot, I was not getting to inner feelings deep enough to evoke a catharsis.
I have found it an on-going process, and have no doubt that much of the stagnation is from genetic memory.
How do you get on with your throat chakra now? Thanks so much for sharing your story.
Like yours, my throat chakra is very much a work in progress. I guess while we are here, it always will be. Paul, your breathing technique is a real gift to the group. I shall use it. Thank you so much for sharing your story too. I feel it's the tip of the iceberg of the wisdom held by this group.xx
@@Cronezonetarot If you'd like to read more about that technique that I use, you might want the book Working With Your Chakras by Ruth White. By-the-way, what should I call you?
@@PaulWhitcomb-ty6md Hi Paul, thanks for the book detailsI which have gone straight on my Christmas list. Ialways used to say my name at the start of videos, it's Lyn. I'll try to say it more often. I hadn't realised I was being a little anonymous.
Very interesting to hear your story, and I've had throat issues a few times in my life, so I can relate to your experience. I've learned a bit about how it's psychosomatic.
(Also, I was hoping that you were going to say that after you cried and felt better, you were able to get up, take another car and follow your husband and son to the university ! 🥹) 🩵
Hi, Miranda, thanks for adding to this stream of heart-felt comments. We all share such similar ground of experience, don't we?
It took me some time to process what had happened and find my legs again. Just as well, or I may have turned up like some dreadful mother from Greek Tragedy, disheveled, with ravaged, tear-stained face. I eventually had a bath and a cup of tea and phoned later. X
@@Cronezonetarot Ah...yes...it's understandable that you needed some time after that. And you're right I suppose, about maybe turning up like some "dreadful mother" etc...😂.
I love your description...hahaha...especially since I happen to be Greek. Actually lots of drama like that still happens with Greeks.
We're so intense, like many Mediterranean people.
I was just wishing that you could be more fulfilled by being there with them after all, but a bath and tea must have been quite soothing, not to mention realizing what had happened to you.