Tri-Life Chronic Pain Management Support Group

This page is dedicated for use by past, current, and future patients of the Tri-Life Center in Minot, ND. The purpose of this page is to post information pertaining to the Chronic Pain Management Support Group.
To Include:
  • Plans and agenda for upcoming meetings
  • Meeting notes from previous meetings
  • Items of interest to the group
  • Any announcements that apply to the group


Number of Visitors since 9-29-07

Announcements

The next meeting will be 9-2-2008 at 5:30 PM at Spiritual Life Christian Fellowship 400 N. Min St. (located 2 blocks east of Sammy's Pizza ). Coffee & Beverages will be available.

Tri-Lifers - I NEED YOUR HELP!

In order to better tailor the meetings towards the needs of the group. I ask that you take time to answer the questions to the polls located in middle of the right hand column.

Thanks, Bob

Saturday, November 3, 2007

2007-11-06 Meeting Agenda

In this newsletter:

  • November 6th Meeting Agenda:
  • Announcements:
  • Reminder on new Meeting Location!

Meeting Agenda:

  • Next meeting will be November 6th, 2007 at 5:30 PM. The meeting will run 1 to 1 1/2 hours. The meeting room will be available until 7:30 PM for you to visit one another.
  • Jeff Kay, Pastor of New Life Lutheran Church in Minot, will be presenting a session on The Process of Grief.
  • We will have a time for group members to present personal concerns or comments for group feedback.
  • We will also complete planning for our upcoming Christmas Party.

Announcements:

  • The December Support Group meeting will be on the 4th at 5:30 PM at the Greenhouse Cafe
  • Our Christmas Party will be on December 11th at 7:00 PM at the Greenhouse Cafe.

Reminder: We have a new meeting place:

The management at the Greenhouse cafe has graciously donated the use of their meeting room for us to hold our support group meetings in. Please make sure to express your gratitude to the management for their support.

The advantages of having our meeting here include:

The Greenhouse Cafe is located at 315 South Main Street in Minot. It is in the office building located diagonally (NE) across from the Trinity Hospital Emergency Room Entrance

Thursday, October 18, 2007

One of our Group Members Morn

Hello Tri-Lifers,

This entry bears a note of sadness for one of our own group members. Karen Davidson lost her son Bram unexpectedly this week. For those of you that may not know this. Karen's daughter is married to Joyce Kremer's son (Joyce is also one of our group members). Karen and her family is in need of your support and prayers.

Karen volunteered as the Support Group coordinator during the 2006-2007 cycle of meetings and is a valuable resource to us all. I was not part of the Tri-Life family until this summer so I was not part of the group when she served in this capacity. I met Karen this year at the first meeting in September and since have heard many great things about her. In this short time I have already gleamed from her wisdom and friendship. After this past meeting she gave me a word of advice that really helped me with a situation I was trying to figure out. Even though I know her very little, I already feel blessed to count her as one of my friends.

Please share your support with Karen as she faces this difficult time. I am sure that you have all heard it said, "it is a difficult thing for a parent to bury one of their children". I personally know how difficult this is and I can testify to what it means to have an outpouring of compassion during this difficult time in Karen's life. If you do not have Karen's address and wish to mail a card please either send it to Tri-Life Center or to myself and we will ensure that it gets passed along to her. (I have included the mailing address at the bottom of this post)

The Minot Daily News had the following information concerning Bram's passing and the visitation and funeral plans:

  • BRAM DAVIDSON, 33, Reno, Nev., formerly of Minot, died Monday in his home. Funeral Saturday, 11 a.m., in Bethany Lutheran Church, Minot. Visitation Friday, 2 to 7 p.m., in Thomas Family Funeral Home, Minot. Memorials are preferred to Minot State University Summer Theater or the American Diabetes Association.

Please keep Karen and her entire family in your thoughts and prayers. They will need supernatural peace and comfort during their time of grief.

Bob Adkins Tri-Life CPM Support Group Coordinator and Meeting Facilitator

Addresses: Karen Davidson

c/o Bob Adkins

108 8th St. SWMinot, ND 58701

bobadkins@srt.com

or

Karen Davidson

c/o Tri-Life Center

PO Box 2023

Minot, ND 58702-2023

TriLife@minot.com

Sunday, September 30, 2007

The Courage to be Myself

I have the courage to…

~ Embrace my strengths ~

~ Get excited about life ~

~ Face and transform my fears ~

~ Ask for help and support when I need it ~

~ Spring free of the super-human trap ~

~ Trust myself ~

~ Make my own decisions and choices ~

~ Befriend myself ~

~ Complete unfinished business ~

~ Realize that I have emotional and practical rights ~

~ Talk as nicely to myself as I do to my plants ~

~ Communicate lovingly with understanding as my goal ~

~ Honor my own needs ~

~ Give myself credit for my accomplishments ~

~ Love the person within me ~

~ Overcome my addiction to approval ~

~ Grant myself permission to play ~

~ Quit being a responsibility sponge ~

~ Feel all of my feelings and act on them appropriately ~

~ Nurture others because I want to, not because I have to ~

~ Choose what is right for me ~

~ Insist on being paid fairly for the job I do ~

~ Set limits and boundaries and stick by them ~

~ Say “yes” only when I really mean it ~

~ Have realistic expectations ~

~ Take risks accept change ~

~ Grow through challenges ~

~ The totally honest with myself ~

~ Correct erroneous beliefs and assumptions ~

~ Respect my vulnerabilities ~

~ Heal old and current wounds ~

~ Favor the mystery of Spirit ~

~ Wave goodbye to guilt ~

~ Plant “flower,” not “weed” thoughts in my mind ~

~ Treat myself with respect and teach others to do the same ~

~ Feel my own cup first, then nourish others from the overflow ~

~ Own my own excellence ~

~ Plan for the future but live in the present ~

~ Value my intuition and wisdom ~

~ Know that I am lovable ~

~ Celebrate the differences between men and women ~

~ Develop healthy, supportive relationships ~

~ Make forgiveness a priority ~

~ Accept myself just as I am now ~

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Medical Information:

If you do not have Adobe Reader installed you will need to install it before you can read these documents.. Click here: to begin download and instalation.

Thera-Cane Instruction Manual

Thermophore Heating Pad Information

Inspiration and Fun Stuff:

Inspiration and Fun Stuff:

As I've Matured - posted 9-12-07

The Courage to be Myself - posted 9-30-07

DAILY CARTOON click to enlarge
ANDERTOONS.COM MEDICAL CARTOONS
Let us never forget the sacrifice of so many and the tragedy of those whose lives were taken.

IMPORTANT: Tri-Life CPM Support Group October Meeting - New meeting location announced!

In this newsletter:
  • Oct. 2nd Meeting Agenda:
  • Announcements:
  • I need your help:
  • New Meeting Location!

Meeting Agenda:

  • Next meeting will be October 2nd, 2007 at 5:30 PM. The meeting will run 1 to 1 1/2 hours. The meting room will be available until 7:30 PM for you to visit one another.
  • We will discuss the new blog site and preliminary plans for a Christmas party.
  • We will have a time for group members to present personal concerns or comments for group feedback.
  • The main topic of the meeting will to provide group members with an introduction to the Tri-LifeCPM Support Group Blog. The web address for the blog is: http://TriLifeSupportGroup.blogspot.com/

    We will cover the following blog topics:

  • Basic overview and navigation of web page
  • Resources available on the site
  • Polls to respond to
  • How to create a login to post comments to postings
  • Plans for future expansion of site
  • What you would like to see on the site
  • Announcements:

    • The pool at Dakota Inn will be closed for repairs and remodeling 9-27-07 through 10-8-07. The Pool group will not meet during this period. The pool is open to all past and current Tri-Life patients for life except Friday at 4:00 PM until Sunday at 2:00 PM.
    • The November Support Group meeting will be on the 6th - Please make plans to attend.
    • The next Chronic Pain Management Program at Tri-Life is currently scheduled to begin on Oct. 15th. If you know anyone that would benefit from this program please have them check with their physician for a referral.

    I need your help:

    I have added a few polls to the Tri-Life CPM Support Group Blog if you have time between now and Tuesday morning I would appreciate it if you visit the blog and take all the polls. The information gleamed from these polls will enable me and the staff at Tri-Life to better serve you. You do not have to log in to take these polls and your answers are confidential.

    The current polls include:

    We have a new meeting place:

    The management at Cindy's Greenhouse cafe has graciously donated the use of their meeting room for us to hold our support group meetings in. Please make sure to express your gratitude to the management for their support.

    The advantages of having our meeting here include:

    • Private meeting room to ensure confidentiality of any private information discussed during group.
    • More comfortable seating
    • The Cafe will be closed to the general public during the time we have our meetings
    • For those that desire, you will have the ability to order beverages and deserts if desired. (can be consumed during the meeting between 5:30 and 6:30)
    • For those interested, supper will can be ordered at 6:30. You will have the choice of ordering from the grill or having the buffet.
    • After the meeting has officially adjourned, those that desire can stay later to visit with one another. The room will be available for us until 7:30 PM.
    • Feel free to bring some cards or other games to play after the meeting has ended

    The Greenhouse Cafe is located at 315 South Main Street in Minot It is in the office building located diagonally (NE) across from the Trinity Hospital Emergency Room Entrance

    Thursday, September 27, 2007

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    Wednesday, September 12, 2007

    As I've Matured

    As I've Matured...

    I've learned that you cannot make someone love you. All you can do is stalk them and hope they panic and give in...

    I've learned that one good turn gets most of the blankets.

    I've learned that no matter how much I care, some people are just jackasses.

    I've learned that it takes years to build up trust, and it only takes suspicion, not proof, to destroy it.

    I've learned that whatever hits the fan will not be evenly distributed.

    I've learned that you shouldn't compare yourself to others - they are more screwed up than you think.

    I've learned that depression is merely anger without enthusiasm.

    I've learned that it is not what you wear; it is how you take it off.

    I've learned that you can keep vomiting long after you think you're finished.

    I've learned to not sweat the petty things, and not pet the sweaty things.

    I've learned that ex's are like fungus, and keep coming back.

    I've learned age is a very high price to pay for maturity.

    I've learned that I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy it.

    I've learned that we are responsible for what we do, unless we are celebrities.

    I've learned that artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity.

    I've learned that 99% of the time when something isn't working in your house, one of your kids did it

    I've learned that there is a fine line between genius and insanity.

    I've learned that the people you care most about in life are taken from you too soon and all the less important ones just never go away. And the real pains in the butt are permanent.

    Monday, September 10, 2007

    Tri-Life Center featured in the Minot Daily News on 9-10-07 - September is Pain Awareness Month

    Hello all,

    In case you did not see the article in the Minot Daily News today about the Tri-Life Center and their Chronic Pain Management program then you will want to read this.

    Tri-Life Center in Minot helps individuals with chronic pain management

    By KATINA TENGESDAL, Staff Writer, ktengesdal@minotdailynews.com

    The Tri-Life Center in Minot specializes in helping individuals manage their chronic pain. The center uses a holistic approach to help its patients and a multidisciplinary team to deal with the physical, emotional and spiritual aspects of chronic pain.

    “Most people that come here have been on many medications and they have run out of benefits from medications,” said Dr. Paul Olson, medical director for the Tri-Life Center. “It’s nice to be able to take people that everybody else has given up on and make a difference in their life.”

    “People (who first come to the center) are scared, angry and depressed,” said Bonnie Sjol, owner and director for the Tri-Life Center. “Nothing has worked in a system that is treating them for acute pain and they have chronic pain.

    Above: Bonnie Sjol, owner and director of the Tri-Life center, shows a quilt that was made by some of the Tri-Life Center's clients after completing the program

    Tri-Life patient Karen Davidson decided to check out the center when she learned about it from a girlfriend. Davidson had suffered chronic pain since childhood due to a blood disease. While she had learned to cope with the pain over the years, she recently began suffering broken bones, which made the pain even more intense.

    Above: Tri-Life patient Karen Davidson displays her zipper mosaic artwork, which she has returned to with full-force after treatment at the center.

    “I really didn’t have much choice anymore, because I was lost,” Davidson said. “I couldn’t cope with what was happening anymore. I was given a bunch of pain medications, but I didn’t like how I was reacting to them. I was hoping it (treatment at Tri-Life) would work and it did.” Bob Adkins, another Tri-Life patient, sought help for chronic pain he had been suffering for 10 years due to repetitive work at the computer. He suffered pinched nerves, a herniated disc, arthritic spurs and chronic pain in his back, shoulder, neck, arm and hand. He underwent a two-level fusion in his neck to help with a pinched nerve, he went through two lower back surgeries that increased his pain symptoms. He was on the verge of getting a second neck fusion surgery when his physician referred him to Tri-Life. “Prior to going to Tri-Life, I was on one opiate medication, narcotics medications, depression medication and medication for arthritis and peripheral neuropathy,” Adkins said. “At Tri-Life, they got me off all that medication except for one. I was hoping to get off narcotics and opiates, and that was successful. I was hoping to gain different skills to deal with the pain.”

    Above - Left: Bob Adkins, a Tri-Life patient, demonstrates one of the self-management techniques he uses for chronic pain using a Thera-Cane. The cane focuses on pressure points.

    Intensive treatment

    Individuals entering the program go through intensive treatment for more than three weeks with a small group, and staff continues to follow up with patients for a year. Patients also have continued access to a support group and the warm-water pool and hot tub for as long as they wish. The Tri-Life Center is located at the Dakota Inn in Minot, and the hotel setting has worked well.

    “The people have been to all the clinics, all the hospitals,” Sjol said. “They feel like they’ve failed there. We also treat clients from all over and they can stay at the hotel as a guest if they want to.

    “In this way, the setting is the most effective for the people we serve,” she added. “It’s a well-setting. Well people stay in hotels and travel.”

    Treating chronic pain differently

    Chronic pain differs from acute pain in that it is long lasting and there isn’t a fix for it. The source isn’t always easily pinpointed, either. At the Tri-Life Center, the team works to help patients utilize tools other than medications and surgeries to self manage their pain, because it is something they will often have for the rest of their lives.

    “Doctors treat chronic pain like acute pain. Chronic pain is different. It’s important to recognize that it’s different and it needs to be treated differently,” Olson said. “Chronic pain can be anywhere in the body. It can be very frustrating. It isn’t like a broken bone that you can see. You can’t put your finger on it and say ‘Here it is.’ ”

    Olson explained that with chronic pain, narcotic medications can have a negative effect on the pain sufferer because the body develops a tolerance to the medication and higher doses are needed over time.

    “It’s one thing if you have cancer and they (narcotics) are used as an end-of-life comfort measure,” he said. “When you have 20 more years to live, you can’t keep having more and more narcotics.”

    While the center’s goal is to help their patients manage pain with as little medication as possible, staff are not focused on taking patients off of every single medication that they are on. They focus on making the patient as comfortable as possible.

    “Our goal is to move them from patient to person. They’re on less medication — the least amount possible, the better it is,” Sjol said. “We live in a quick-fix society. There isn’t a quick-fix (for chronic pain). There isn’t a magic shot, pill, surgery or fix. They (chronic pain sufferers) have usually been there, done that, and they still have pain.”

    “Some (Tri-Life patients) have been told that we’re going to take them off all their medications and that’s not the case,” Olson said. “Our goal is to make them as comfortable as possible. It all depends on each individual.”

    The Tri-Life Center utilizes a team approach with Olson as the medical director, Dr. Julie Rickert as the psychologist, Arlo Pretzer as the physical therapist, Sjol as the registered nurse and Brenda Munsau as the office manager.

    “When you have a team of people working toward the same goal, it makes all the difference in the world,” Olson said.

    The team uses a holistic approach to treatment. The term “holistic” sometimes confuses patients to what the center’s all about.

    “With the word ‘holistic’ they think there will be subliminal messages on the walls or hypnosis, but the word just describes how we are as people,” Sjol said.

    “We are all medical professionals with separate disciplines. We talk about what we’re seeing (in the patient) so we can help them along,” Olson said. “A person may tell someone when they’re working one-on-one with them something that affects their whole treatment. Without the whole team communicating, you miss out on opportunities to help people.”

    The Tri-Life Center utilizes warm-water therapy, modified tai chi and other gentle stretching and exercises to help patients manage pain and regain their range of motion as a physical part of treatment.

    “They’ve been in traditional physical therapy, so they are very skeptical,” Sjol said. “Everything we do here is conducive for people with chronic pain. We don’t do aggressive physical therapy. What we find is that aggressive physical therapy has made their pain worse. Tai chi helps decrease pain while increasing range of motion and the warm water is conducive to healing and relaxation,” Sjol said.

    The center also helps individuals cope with setting their own limits. Sjol explained that chronic pain patients may be seen as malingerers or individuals who are just lazy and don’t want to work. She said that with most chronic pain sufferers, the opposite is true — they are often individuals who led very active lives before their pain set in.

    “They (chronic pain sufferers) are usually perfectionists and they were working over 40 hours a week,” Sjol said. “They were not lazy. They have to learn to listen to their body. It’s become kind of a denial for them. They’re used to thinking, ‘Do the job of two or three people and get promoted.’ They never had limits before — they could do it all.”

    “They’re used to working too much and sleeping too little, then all of a sudden they have this pain and they can’t do that anymore and they almost lose their identity,” Olson said.

    Patients also learn to manage the depression, stress, anger and sleep problems that often comes with chronic pain. Sjol explained an illustration the center’s staff often uses for patients — they have run into stop signs in life and have managed to get around them, until they run into a stop sign too big to get around.

    “We have to look back and say, maybe I was on the wrong road,” she said.

    Passion for life

    Patients put in a lot of work in the center’s program to learn how to manage their pain.

    “It’s a demanding program. You have to work to get better. The first week, they are frustrated and fatigued and the second week is so much better. It’s amazing to watch the transition, to watch people get better,” Olson said.

    For patients who have been through the program, they often experience a renewed energy and passion for activities they enjoyed before their pain became unbearable.

    “I’m a freelance artist and I was teaching classes and having gallery shows,” Davidson said. Then after I started breaking bones, I wasn’t doing that much anymore, because I wasn’t able to. Now, since the program, I’m back again. I have my own art studio downtown. I’ve been having a few gallery shows.”

    “I have artwork in different stores throughout the United States. This has all happened within the last three years and I know it’s due to being in Tri-Life,” she said.

    For Adkins, he felt the need to reassess his path in life.

    “I have been trying for many years to stick with computer work and I needed to reassess that part of my life and move forward, using adaptive equipment or retraining for a different type of career,” Adkins said. “Since I’ve been dealing with chronic pain for so many years, I have now gotten the realization that I needed to change jobs and learn limits, to function and have a better quality of life.”

    Adkins is now pursuing a new passion.

    “I was called to ministry at 16, I served as associate pastor in the Church of God. Through Tri-Life, I had a better assessment of my life. I am working on my ordination and starting a new church in the area,” he said.

    The program has also helped Adkins regain his stamina in his everyday activities.

    “Now, by using self treatment tools, I may have to stop a few times in a day for 30 minutes to do self-treatment, but now I’m able to do most housework,” he said. “Before, I could take a four-block walk. Now I can do a two-mile walk.”

    Group atmosphere, support

    Both Adkins and Davidson cited the group atmosphere as a helpful part of the program. Many patients still get together after their treatment by attending a support group and exercise sessions in the pool.

    “It was good to have the group situation because you realized you weren’t the only one,” Davidson said. “You don’t realize that a lot of other people have pain, too, and once you go through the program, you hear things from others and you realize that they have to learn to cope as well.”

    “It enables you to see that other people are in a similar situation,” Adkins said. “You learn more about the things that you have been taught. We interact, we become like a family in a three-week period.”

    Adkins and Davidson also recommended the program to others who are suffering from chronic pain.

    “If a person has chronic pain, they don’t need to go through years of it before going through this program,” Adkins said. “If it continues to be chronic and at high levels, this program is for them. Discuss the program with your physician and get a referral. The staff is very caring and loving and they will support you any way they can.”

    “I always recommend Tri-Life because I believe in it and it helps people,” Davidson said. “I tell them, when they go, to not give up. The first week is the hardest, because everything’s new, but just keep going because it will help.”

    Saturday, September 8, 2007

    9-4-07 Support Group Meeting Notes

    Announcements:

    • September is Pain Awareness Month and an article on Tri-Life will be published in the Minot Daily News on Monday, 9-10-07. Make sure to get a copy of this article and share it!

    • The pool at Dakota Inn will be closed for repairs and remodeling 9-27-07 through 10-8-07. The Pool group will not meet during this period. The pool is open to all past and current Tri-Life patients for life except Friday at 2:00 PM until Sunday at 4:00 PM.

    • The next meeting will be 10-2-07 at 5:30 PM at the Dakota Inn. The topic of this meeting is yet to be determined.

    Meeting Notes:

    The first meeting of the 2007-2008 Tri-Life Center patient Chronic Pain Management support group was held on 9-4-07. Bonnie Sjol facilitated the meeting. There was 9 people in attendance.

    The agenda of this meeting was to formulate plans for this cycle of meetings.

    Topics discussed included:

    • I am Bob Adkins and I will be the Support Group Coordinator and meeting facilitator for this cycle of meetings. (Note: I will be posting introductory information about myself in another blog entry.

    • Meetings will be held the 1st Tuesday of every month through May 2008. The meetings will start at 5:30 PM CST and will be targeted to last 1 hour.

    • Meetings will have a guest speaker that will present 1/2 hour of information on the chosen topic for that day. The remainder of the time will be spent in discussion, questions, and time for each member to discuss any recent concerns in their life that they want to share.

    • If you have an email address then Bob will send out a reminder email a week before each meeting and will send out notes from each meeting ASAP afterwards. If you do not currently receive these and would like to be included please send your email address to TriLifeSupportGroup@gmail.com.

    • An attempt will be made to call each member the day before each meeting. Sue volunteered to take on this task unless weather prevents her from getting to town. In these instances Bob will attempt to make these calls. In behalf of the entire Group we thank you Sue for volunteering!

    The following meeting topics were suggested by group members:

    • Review of getting back to basics

    • Leading the group in guided meditation

    • Mental Health care refresher - the importance taking care of your mind

    • Have information session on filing Social Security disability claims

    • Have Julie Ricker present information on services available from NDAD (North Dakota Association for the Disabled) (Check NDAD out online at: http://www.ndad.org/)

    • Have a representative from NAMI (National Association on Mental Illness) give a presentation. (Check NAMI out online at: http://www.nami.org/)

    • Have a representative from Independence Inc. provide information on services offered (Check Independence Inc. out online at: http://www.independencecil.org/)

    • Have Paulette Vedvig from Revive Studio present information on "Yamina Body Rolling", a self massage exercise routine.

    • Have a representative from the Minot Commission on aging provide information on services offered (Check out the Commission on Aging online at: http://minotcoa.org/)

    • Have Rev. Bob Edwards give a seminar on Grief issues. (Check out information on the Church that Rev. Bob Edwards pastors online at: http://www.minotfpc.org/)

    • Have a night dedicated to family and friend awareness of CPM sufferers.

    • Have meeting that provides nutritional and natural health information.

    • Have a night dedicated to specific health issues that are common within the group members (I.E. diabetes, heart disease)

    • Watch an inspiring video

    Some information on the Revive Studio: We had Debbie & Pam in the group for the first time. One of them suffer with Fibromyalgia and migraines, she is the one that recommends this treatment, the other is her sister.

    • An excerpt from KXMC news Business Beat, with Carla Burbidge, on 12-21-06 provides the following information on the Revive Studio: "...Yamina Body Rolling. There's many different aspects to it, using balls of all sizes and various densities. Paulette, a massage therapist, opened a studio on Central Avenue this month known as Revive. She is the only certificated body rolling instructor in North Dakota. She says body rolling has benefits like stimulating nerve endings, developing core strength, bone stimulation and various fitness aspects just to name a few. (Paulette Vedvig, Revive Studio) "It's stress reducing, all the benefits of a massage, and it helps with moods and sleep. So it's an amazing system, even if someone is bed-ridden or in a wheelchair, someone can benefit from body rolling." Paulette offers several classes on body rolling each week." You can watch a video of this news report online at: http://www.kxmb.com/video.asp?ArticleId=78831&VideoId=3946 Please note that this business is shown at the end of this news report.

    • Thank you Debbie & Pam for your suggestions and for being part of our group! We welcome you and hope to see you againand again in our meetings.

    Bible Study proposed for group members:

    • I am a minister and is currently working towards starting a new Church in the Minot area.

    • Bonnie and Bob had discussed starting a Bible Study group for Tri-Life patients. This study will be non-denominational and will be open to all.

    • This study will begin soon but a start date is yet to be determined. This will be held separate from the CPM support group and may have other people from the community in attendance.

    • Why a Bible Study? To provide support to people for the spiritual side of holistic healing. The program at Tri-Life gave us many tools to heal our body, mind and spirit. However with the judgmental Church culture prevalent in our communities, often times people with major health issues, addictions, or personal issues are forgotten about and ignored.

    • My vision for this study time is to teach "Relational Wholeness". what I mean by this is: to teach us that god accepts us for who we are and where we are at in life, to teach us that since God finds us worthy that we need to accept ourselves as a worthy and important person, and to teach us how to relate to other by displaying the love of God to everyone we meet. We need to be able to be accepting of others for who they are and where they are at in life and work towards assisting them in healing of their body, mind, and spirit.

    To find out more about me and the Church I plan to open you can visit the following sites:

    My contact information is:

    “May you be filled with blessings that only God can author. Author: Bob Adkins April 2007

    Have you Seen These Children?

    Daily Affirmations


    I am a worthwhile and productive person

    I am somebody

    I am happy and I deserve to be loved

    I have a positive mental attitude

    I am a good person

    I am a good parent and/or spouse

    I take responsibility for my actions

    I am a forgiving person to myself and others

    I love myself as much as I love others

    I am healing in body, mind and spirit


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