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Our bodies are designed to heal. We fall off our bikes and skin our knees―and without effort on our part, the skin looks like new in a few days. But while our skinned knees easily heal, it can sometimes feel like our emotional and relational wounds are left gaping open, broken beyond repair. If our bodies instinctively know how to heal physical injuries, could they also help us understand how to restore painful emotional and relational ruptures? In their book Designed to Heal: What the Body Shows Us about Healing Wounds, Repairing Relationships, and Restoring Community, and on today's episode, physician Jennie A. McLaurin and scientist Cymbeline Tancongco Culiat: • address the immense felt need for reconciliation, wholeness, and function in our broken relationships and divided communities, • explain the science behind the stages of physical wound healing and how this reveals parallel insights into how people can recover from social wounds, • share current research on brain science as it relates to the damaging effects of trauma and the protective effects of positive emotions and experiences, • equip readers with new concepts and tools to use in resolving interpersonal conflict, and • offer hope and encouragement to readers as they pursue the healing of divisions within their greater communities. Join us to learn how the body is created with mechanisms that optimize a flourishing recovery from life's inevitable wounds. We pray after listening, you realize we are given a model for hopeful, faithful, and enduring healing in all other aspects of our lives. Our wounds don't have to have the last word. “We want people to be hopeful about healing and see it as the healthy design. We believe that readers can extract a lot of principles from the book so they can become better agents of healing in their lives/circles—offering themselves as agents of healing — to be essential components of the healing matrix in the circles they live in.” Cymbeline T. Culiat Connect with Jennie and Bem: https://jenniemclaurin.com
024 - Designed To Heal (w/Jennie A. McLaurin)A doctor and a scientist reveal how to heal relational and emotional wounds by exploring the amazing restorative processes of the body.I had so much fun dialoguing with Jennie. She is woman full of wisdom, faith and love. I think you'll wholeheartedly enjoy this conversation. I feel as though I gained a sister in Christ.Our bodies are designed to heal. We fall off our bikes and skin our knees―and without effort on our part, the skin looks like new in a few days. But while our skinned knees easily heal, it can sometimes feel like our emotional and relational wounds are left gaping open, broken beyond repair. If our bodies instinctively know how to heal physical injuries, could they also help us understand how to restore painful emotional and relational ruptures?In their groundbreaking debut book, physician Jennie McLaurin and scientist Cymbeline T. Culiat write Designed to Heal: a fascinating look at how the restorative processes of the body can model patterns we may adapt to heal the acute and chronic wounds of our social bodies. Through engaging patient stories, imaginative travels through the body's microcellular landscapes, accessible references to current research, and reflections on the image of God, Designed to Heal offers a new perspective for healing our social divisions. By learning how the body is created with mechanisms that optimize a flourishing recovery from life's inevitable wounds, we are given a model for hopeful, faithful, and enduring healing in all other aspects of our lives. Our wounds don't have to have the last word. [Taken from https://www.jenniemclaurin.com/books ]Some info about Jennie.She has written for MIssio Alliance and Biologos Jennie's Website Writing for Missio AllianceWriting for BioLogoPresence And Practicehttps://www.presenceandpractice.com/ We teach and train people in relationship skills that enable them to stay awake to the love of God and love of others.If you are interested in online Therapy or Brain Skill Coachinghttps://www.loppnowrelationshipcenter.com/ #PresenceAndPractice#IJ #ImmanuelJournaling
Outrage. Perhaps no other word better captures the spirit of our times, the wildfire in society that keeps roaring back with more and more fuel. It can deplete all our energy for quieter work, draw us away from the still small voice of God, and seem impossible to overcome. It spreads from social conflict to interpersonal relationships, disrupting community in the home, church, and workplace. How can pastors help their congregations reimagine a way forward, one that hammers their swords into plowshares (Isaiah 2:4, nlt) and leads to lasting unity? Eugene Peterson translates those Isaiah verses further by stating, “He will show us the way he works so we can live the way we're made (The Message).” The way we're made. Yes—we are designed to heal, not to fester in our wounds. We are meant to be made whole through Christ and his church. One way God shows us how he works is in the way he created our physical selves. Our bodies have simple yet elegant systems in place to promote restoration and recovery, rather than rupture and limitation, when we are wounded. Can we live the way we're made by following the example of the body, made in the image of God? Might this be particularly appropriate for Christian community as we are called the body of Christ (1 Corinthians 12:27, nlt)? In Designed to Heal, we encounter the persistent, orderly stages of physical wound healing. Clotting, inflammation, new growth, and return to function—even if through scarring—are portrayed through poignant patient stories illustrating each phase of healing. Chapters reflect how a particular aspect of physical healing can be a model for relational healing. Inflammation, it turns out, is a necessary and helpful process. After clotting comes to the rescue, inflammatory cells get to work cleaning up the wound site. Just the right amount of pressure is applied by their work to prevent further damage. They identify debris that doesn't belong and swallow it up. But then they get out of the way so new growth can begin. If the inflammatory stage goes awry and those cells don't get a clear signal to stop their work, good tissue gets hurt. Healing stops. Jennie A. McLaurin is a writer and physician with degrees in medicine, public health, and theology. Her book, Designed to Heal: What the Body Shows Us about Healing Wounds, Repairing Relationships, and Restoring Community (coauthored with Cymbeline T. Culiat), releases in August 2021.