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Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Kimberly Burnham

Author of "Awakenings: Peace Dictionary, Language and the Mind, A Daily Brain Health Program" Kimberly Burnham, PhD (Integrative Medicine) investigates the relationship between memory, language, caring and pattern recognition to create a daily brain health exercise program enabling people to achieve better neurological health, mood, and quality of life. She is on a mission to create more peace and understanding in the world by collecting and writing about the nuanced meaning of “Peace” in 4,000 different languages and is looking for funding to complete the project. Known as The Nerve Whisperer, Kimberly uses words (books, presentations, and poetry), health coaching, guided visualization, and hands-on therapies (CranioSacral therapy, acupressure, Matrix Energetics, Reiki, and Integrative Manual Therapy) to help people heal from nervous system and autoimmune conditions. She also focuses on vision issues like macular degeneration and supports people looking for eye exercises to improve driving and reading skills as well as athletic visual speed. An award-winning poet, Kimberly grew up overseas. The child of an international businessman and an artist, she learned Spanish in Colombia; French in Belgium; then Japanese in Tokyo and has studied both Italian and Hebrew as an adult. The author of “My Book: Self-Publishing, a Guided Journal”, she can be reached for health coaching, publishing help, bible study zoom presentations or talking about peace at NerveWhisperer@gmail.com or http://www.NerveWhisperer.Solutions.

Compassion in the Brain of Pain

Our brains experience pain in similar ways regardless of whether it is physical, emotional, or social pain

Caring, Creativity and Clarity in the Frontal Lobe

You can think of the Frontal lobe function as a triangle: Caring, Creativity, and Clear thinking.

Peace quotes to live by

And I started to think about war and peace and why we fight.

Honoring the Intersecting Parts of Myself and My Community

Two years ago on a Jewish sponsored bicycle ride (the Hazon Cross-USA), I sat in a Baha'i temple and thought about how connected I am to all the Abrahamic traditions and how hate perpetrated against one hurts all of us for we are all connected.

Who decides what’s a weed, and should we really destroy them?

Who decides whether these plants in the garden are weeds or not? Who decides the defining characteristics of a weed?

Sacred texts and the juxtaposition of 1938

Lately, I have been focused on who are we destroying and excluding. Are we marginalizing the very people who can contribute to our survival — to our finding a way for all 7 billion of us to thrive and be healthy?

Will Your Religion Be Unrecognizable in 100 Years?

What do you think your religion or spiritual practice will look like in the hands, hearts and minds of people 100 years from now?

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