Endobiogenics

“The best doctor is not the one who cures the disease, but the one who can protect from it”
(Thomas Fuller)

Just pronouncing the name requires a double espresso, and what lies beneath it – entire histories, God’s language and human destinies. We’ll draw back the curtain on the concept of endobiogenics through our integrative therapy prism.

The French, it turns out, have invented more than one world-changing thing: the parachute (1797, though no, we don’t recommend jumping for therapeutic purposes), the stethoscope (1816, and yes, we use it in biodynamic psychotherapy!) and many others, including endobiogenics (around 1980). The names that must be mentioned here are Dr. Christian Duraffourd and Dr. Jean-Claude LaPraz.

The direct translation of endobiogenics into Lithuanian would be “generation of internal life” (“Endo-” means inside, “-bio-” means life, and “-geny” is the generation and maintenance of that life). However, there’s a much deeper, more spiritual description of endobiogenics:

“God created man, and so he wouldn’t get sick, gave him a meadow full of medicinal herbs.”
Dr. Jurgita Šukevičienė
Pizza, kebab, sandwich, or some roasted chicken. Delicious! However, most food products these days are processed, humans have become distant from nature, so God’s pharmacy doesn’t enter our lives naturally, by itself.
Heal me, doctor, says the sick person and looks hopefully at the prescription. Maybe finally the doctor, an endobiogenics specialist, will give the right medicines that will work and help? Anything can happen. However, the doctor gives not just a prescription with herbal tinctures, but a whole healing instruction covering what to eat, how much to exercise, how to sleep, etc. They say, I won’t heal you, you must heal yourself, I’ll just show you the way and give you lots and lots of homework. And who likes that homework? Unfortunately, there’s no shortcut to long-term results and here too it’s God’s design.
One of the more interesting things about medicinal herbs is that their effect depends also on who picked them. How they were picked. Where they were picked. With love and gentleness, with respect and humility, or mechanically, with calculation? In their own garden where birds chirp and happy children run around, or by the highway full of tension, stress, speed and various pollutants? Therefore, when buying medicinal herbs it’s worth knowing the person or the company selling them and their values. Even better is to find time in our fast-paced daily lives and pick herbs in the meadow yourself – with your dreams, with humble gratitude, with prayer and a smile on your face.
Modern medicine, antibiotics, other chemical drugs are wonderful things that have saved more than one life and helped root out terrible epidemics that once wiped out entire generations of people. But they’re not a panacea for all troubles. “One size fits all” is a rather crude treatment method suitable for extreme cases. Endobiogenics selects treatment individually – the same symptoms are treated differently because each person is unique. Specialists, when examining a person, evaluate everything – how they speak, what their skin is like, how they breathe. A blood test tells much about what’s happening in their body. Having put all factors together, the therapist uses endobiogenic formulas showing connections between medicinal herbs and blood indicators, a comprehensive evaluation of body and psyche, personal experience and, of course, her majesty intuition.
These last few factors also speak about the therapist’s individuality and uniqueness, which affects the relationship with the patient. This is important because colloquially speaking ‘the chemistry has to match’. Each endobiogenics (and other modality specialist) works differently and has their own unique circle of patients. Our administrator who registers patients by phone talks about this interestingly and playfully. According to her – some are short, clear, laconic, others slower, dreamy, others calm, humble etc. and they distribute very typically according to the receiving therapists’ manner.
What kind of person are you? Call or write, all patients are interesting and precious to us!
Finally – there are many wonderful, detailed scientific descriptions intended both for specialists and patients interested in endobiogenics – we provide some links in Lithuanian, English and, of course, French:

In Lithuanian

In English

In French

 

 

Endobiogenics Specialists

Jurgita Šukevičienė

Jurgita Šukevičienė

Endobiogenics specialist, family doctor

Evelina Nevardauskaitė - Rudzikienė

Evelina Nevardauskaitė – Rudzikienė

Endobiogenics specialist, family doctor, NLP new code certified coach