Q: How is cell-level healing different from Reiki and other “energy work” we hear about? A: All these forms of healing have been developed by people for the purpose of becoming practitioners who assist others. The particular beliefs, style, and manner of doing the work and of teaching practitioners varies greatly. Some require years of training, some require initiations, some require significant financial investment. My intention with the book, Cell-Level Healing. The Bridge from Soul to Cell is to provide tools for anyone to begin the process of integrating an energy approach to whatever therapy or treatments they are already doing. Many of my students, over the years, had been initiated or certified by other schools of energy healing modalities before they found me. They discovered that this work enriched their understanding and deepened their practices. The work described in Cell-Level Healing is not based in dogma. In fact, is experiential and exploratory in nature. It is dynamic, adapted to each individual and not encumbered by ritual or dogma. This work does not presuppose that a particular ailment or condition means something specific about one’s life, thoughts or actions. The discovery of positive ways to assist you in living fully enables movement forward, free from limiting practices.
Q: How has the medical and scientific community responded to the idea of cell-level healing? A: Physicians and scientists have come to me as clients, and students, and they refer others to me. Although a small sample, relatively speaking, it is encouraging that professional communities are open to integrating this work with western clinical and scientific practices. There are now 17 medical schools in the US with programs to teach medical students meditation, self care, and complementary medicine. Those schools include Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and Georgetown University Medical Center. I have been invited to present to medical and scientific conferences and will continue to do so. The medical community has become even more interested as recent mainstream research with brain-wave testing on Tibetan meditators has shown clear supportive evidence that this meditation affects brain function in a positive way. I recently was the subject of similar brain-wave studies, and in both cases—with the Tibetan monks and me—the work shows that our brain function differs significantly from non-meditators and non-healers. An attitude of compassion actually initiates neurogenesis in the brain. That means that brain cells divide under those conditions and therefore keep the brain working well. If brain neurons can do this, the question remains for science to explore how other cells in the body may respond to healing meditations. Q: What do you hope to accomplish with the book and your current work in cell-level healing? A: My intent is to do everything I can to assist people to find their fullest and most meaningful life, free of as much pain as possible. I trust that ultimately, everyone can find hope and experience transformation from suffering.
Interview with Hayward Hawks Marcus CellLevelHealing.com