Why You Might Not Want to Book Me,
and the science of why you should

I often work with clients on 12-week journeys. They usually arrive exhausted, burned out, and carrying the weight of major life traumas. Naturally, they assume their exhaustion is purely psychological, and often, it is.
But during our first two sessions of intake and discovery, I start asking unusual questions. One of the biggest red flags I look for isn’t just in your history, but in your environment. Specifically, the humble fluorescent light.
What I’m about to tell you is equal parts woo and hard science. In truth, they are the same thing; new age is often just a label for science we haven’t yet integrated into the mainstream. When a client tells me they are drowning in tiredness, I don’t only look at your history; I look up. If you are sitting under fluorescent bulbs, you aren’t just in a room; you are bathing in an electromagnetic field vibrating at 50 to 60 Hz.
For many, this is a silent toxin. If I ask a client to switch off these lights and they feel better within a week, it tells me they have a sensory sensitivity. This simple environmental shift can alleviate migraines, vertigo, brain fog, anxiety, and even nausea. For those navigating epilepsy, ADHD, autism, or brain injuries, these lights aren’t just annoying; they are a literal assault on the nervous system.
To understand why you feel exhausted, you have to understand the why, and to understand why, I have to explain Voltage-Gated Calcium Channels (VGCCs). Imagine your cell is like an egg. The Extremely Low Frequencies (ELF) from fluorescent lighting act like a microscopic hammer, creating cracks in the shell, which is the cell membrane. This allows calcium to flood into the cell, overwhelming its internal buffering system.
When your cells are flooded, your entire system goes into overload. Your nervous, cardiovascular, and immune systems begin to redline. This is why the initial symptoms are often anxiety, tiredness, and hypertension. Your body is quite literally working harder just to exist in the room.
If left unchecked, this chronic calcium signalling leads to oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. It accelerates aging and can contribute to neurodegenerative and cognitive disorders. We are living in a world where we are constantly submerged in these frequencies.
If you want to move from surviving to thriving, we have to change the frequency of your life. Here is how we start:
First, the swap. Switch to incandescent bulbs or flicker-free LEDs. Use floor lamps or desk lamps rather than overhead fixtures.
Second, the support. We target biology by using Magnesium, CoQ10, Omega-3s, and B-Complex to help the cells repair and buffer the stress.
Third, the grounding. Prioritize natural sunlight. Face the morning sun so those beautiful biophotons can be absorbed by your DNA. Use Epsom salt baths and earthing (feet on the soil) to reset your body’s electromagnetic rhythm.
I share this because my goal isn’t to keep you in coaching; it’s to help you find the answers so quickly that you don’t need me by Week 4.
Sometimes, what we perceive as a deep-seated psychological trauma is actually a biological system under environmental duress. When we discover that a client’s energy was simply being compromised by their surroundings, our journey often reaches a natural and successful conclusion right then and there. If resolving your environment solves your struggle, my job is done.
To keep a client tethered to a 12-week program when they have already found their answer would be cost-effective for me, but a profound disservice to you. This knowledge alone has the potential to save you thousands of dollars in unnecessary coaching. I would rather you spend that time and energy living your life in your newly cleared field, unless, of course, you choose to stay and dive deeper into the mysteries of the soul.
My goal isn’t just to talk about your past; it’s to ensure your physical vessel is actually capable of holding the healing we are doing. Sometimes, the breakthrough you’re looking for starts with the flick of a switch.

Bibliography
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searchworks.stanford.edu/articles/8gh__99899454
air.unimi.it/handle/2434/30468
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19296340/
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