Welcome! I'm glad you're here.

My name is Sarit Zeltzer, a certified psychotherapist (M.A.) in Expressive Arts Therapy from Lesley University in Boston, and a graduate of Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem. I've also studied at the Tobias School of Art & Therapy in the UK.

Like many others, I believe that the fast pace of modern life requires us to take a moment to pause, disconnect from daily demands, and reconnect with ourselves. To listen to the needs of both mind and body. If you're experiencing emotional, physical, or mental difficulties and are seeking ways to enhance your quality of life and navigate challenging situations more effectively, you've come to the right place.

How Can I Help?

Trauma and Post-Traumatic Growth: I specialize in helping individuals heal from trauma, whether from accidents, loss, difficult childbirth, or other traumatic experiences. I guide clients through a process of emotional and mental healing and post-traumatic growth.

Anxiety and Depression: Using mindfulness and creativity-based approaches, I assist in managing anxiety and depression, including symptoms of PTSD.

Fertility and Pregnancy: I provide emotional support to women navigating fertility challenges, pregnancy, and childbirth, helping them reconnect with their bodies and build confidence.

Chronic Stress and Burnout: I support individuals coping with chronic stress or burnout, combining mindfulness and creativity to foster a deeper connection between mind and body.

My Therapeutic Approaches

I use therapeutic methods that integrate:

Mindfulness and Creativity-Based Therapy: An innovative approach that combines the principles of mindfulness with the power of creativity, allowing for deeper access to emotional and cognitive experiences, unique expression, and smoother processing of those experiences.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for trauma: A well-researched method that effectively addresses a wide range of emotional challenges, including anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress.

Benefits of My Integrated Therapy

- Mind-Body Connection: This approach facilitates a deeper connection between emotional and cognitive experiences.
- Focus on the Present: Mindfulness encourages presence in the current moment, fostering acceptance of emotions and thoughts without judgment.
- Creative Expression
: Creativity offers a unique way to express and process emotions and experiences.
- **Strengthening Self-Efficacy:** Mindfulness and creativity practices help enhance self-confidence and the belief in your ability to face life's challenges.

My book, *The Art of Feeling at Home*, will soon be published and translated into Hebrew. This practical guide accompanies readers on their personal hero's journey—an emotional and mental healing process following trauma. The book integrates mindfulness, creativity, and compassion, offering tools for coping with pain and fostering renewal. Through inner exploration and mindful reflection, it leads to a deeper sense of home within and a stronger connection to oneself and the world around us.

The book can also serve as a valuable resource for art therapists and other practitioners, providing creative approaches and practical tools to support their clients' healing journeys.

I believe we all possess the power to change and grow, and I would be honored to accompany you on your journey.

[Read more about me](#)

[Fertility and Pregnancy Workshops](#)

[Contact Me](https://wa.me/972524219503)

Does this connected version feel right?

Sarit Zeltzer

Welcome to my home page

Welcome and nice you have arrived at my home page

My name is Sarit Zeltzer, I love practicing meditation on the beach, and I work as a therapist and guide at a private clinic in Herzliya. Over the years, I have treated children at risk and children with autism as part of an association. I have combined mindfulness and art in private, group, and dyadic therapy. I teach professional development courses for teachers and therapists in private settings and at the Ministry of Education. I also give lectures and workshops at conferences in Israel and around the world.


I have been practicing Tai Chi attentiveness since 1993. I developed the Gaia method, which is a healing approach through creativity, during pregnancy and childbirth processes.

As an expressive and creative psychotherapist, I hold a master's degree from LESLEY University, I studied in the Therapeutic Art Anthroposophic program at Tobias School in England. I am a graduate of the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design.

If you have any questions, thoughts, or requests at any given moment, I am here for you.

I have several stories that have shaped my life's path, just like everyone else. A dramatic event led me to daily meditation practice and eventually to the world of therapy. It was a year after I finished my studies at Bezalel when a car accident disrupted my career as a designer and artist. The loss of consciousness and being bedridden for a few days led me to a transformative shift in perception and a daily meditation practice that has lasted for 30 years.

When I woke up, it was clear to me that the near-death experience echoed my strong desire to live. The recovery process, which I consider a journey of discovery, lasted for over a year. During this period, I discovered the strength within me that was ready to let go of the past and focus on the present moment while slowly weaving my future. Tai Chi practice and tailored nutrition allowed me to reconnect with the world, cultivate awareness, and find tranquility even amidst external and internal turbulence.

I realized the importance of being aware of the present moment and the fact that nothing is taken for granted. I learned to appreciate the ability to take a blank page, place a hand covered in blue paint on it, and let the movement freely unfold, adding color and nurturing the growth of an image of a tree on the paper. Thanks to the recovery process from the accident, I experienced the power of creation, being attentive, and appreciating what exists in the present moment as a healing force.

The accident, the recovery, my experience as an artist, and as a facilitator of creative courses, combined with my studies in art therapy with an anthroposophic approach in England, gained significance and meaning through the experiences of my pregnancies and childbirths. My birth stories, like those of many women who come to me, often begin with traumatic birth experiences and the need for a healing birth experience before the next birth. As a result, I developed the Gaia method, a healing approach through creativity, for the processes of conception, pregnancy, and birth. Over the years, I have trained professional women in various frameworks (doulas, midwives, and childbirth preparation instructors) to use the Gaia method.

I continue to learn from my journey, my family, my clients, and my students about the constancy of change and how it can be activated again and again through the power of creativity and attentiveness (mindfulness). This promotes healing and the sense of being able to feel at home with any path taken.

CONTACT US

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THE ART OF FEELING AT HOME - Guided Practices

The guided meditations you’ll find here are part of the book The Art of Feeling at Home, which explores healing through a mindful and creative approach. Whether you’ve already explored the book or are encountering these practices for the first time, you are warmly invited to embark on this journey of healing and growth.

The book weaves together stories, insights, and practical tools for navigating trauma through mindfulness and creativity. These meditations are an integral part of that journey, offering a gentle and supportive space to reconnect with yourself, cultivate resilience, and discover inner peace.

If you are navigating the effects of PTSD or other challenges, consider practicing with a trusted friend or therapist to ensure a safe environment for your healing. Having a supportive presence can help create a nurturing space, allowing you to engage more fully in this journey toward renewal and wholeness.

  • Find a quiet space where you won’t be disturbed.  Ensure you have a notebook or journal and a pen/pencil. If you choose to paint, have your painting supplies ready.  Consider lighting a candle or playing soft background music to create a calming atmosphere. https://soundcloud.com/user-151827539/rytvshzvkoqa?utm_source=clipboard&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=social_sharing&si=6baf1d1ea2...

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  • Let be and let go meditation in the unknown stage encourages accepting reality as it is ("Let Be") and then releasing attachment to it ("Let Go"). This opens the door to healing and transformation, even when the path forward is unclear.

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  • 3. The Unknown Secret Forest: Guided practiceBy integrating meditation, journaling/painting/sculpting or any other creative activity, you're forming a holistic practice that taps into various facets of self-expression and exploration, giving you a comprehensive and deep understanding of your journey through the unknown.

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  • This meditation invites you to explore your inner adventurer with gentle curiosity. By blending mindfulness with creativity, it offers a space for you to connect with your inner call and simply be present with whatever arises. As you engage with this practice, it encourages a sense of openness to the journey ahead, allowing space for new insights and experiences to unfold naturally, at your...

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  • Find a quiet place where you can sit comfortably. Close your eyes and take a few deep breaths. Notice the sensations of your breath as they flow in and out of your body. 

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  • In this guided practice, you will explore body sensations using imagination and gentle movement. By visualizing yourself as a tree, you'll connect deeply with the ground and feel rooted and stable. You'll observe how your body and mind respond as you move freely, guided by your breath. This practice combines mindfulness, visualization, and creativity to deepen your connection with...

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  • This mindful exercise is designed to help you connect with your breath and release built-up tension. By visualizing your breath as a balloon gently expanding and contracting, this practice encourages relaxation and a deeper awareness of your breathing patterns. It promotes a sense of calm and helps let go of stress, fostering a more centered state of being.  

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  • Breathing in Colors is a visualization practice that helps you connect with your emotions. It encourages you to exhale what you no longer need and inhale what nurtures and supports you, using colors as a way to engage with your feelings mindfully and create a sense of balance and calm. 

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  • Encourages you to slow down and fully engage your senses while eating. Paying close attention to each bite's taste, texture, smell, and appearance helps cultivate a deeper connection with your body and food, promoting gratitude and awareness in the present moment.

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  • ‘Chocolate Meditation’ is a sensory meditation that invites you to experience a piece of chocolate with full awareness. Through mindful tasting, you explore the texture, aroma, and flavours, allowing yourself to fully savour the moment. This practice cultivates a sense of joy and presence, turning a simple act into a blissful experience.

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  • Navigating the Pendulum's Swing is a playful meditation that explores the balance between contrasting emotions and experiences. With a lighthearted approach, this practice encourages embracing the ups and downs and finding resilience and strength in the subtle middle ground. It highlights the beauty, growth, and connection that emerge when we navigate the full spectrum of our journey...

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  • LAKE Meditation is a gentle practice that invites you to be present with your emotions, allowing them to come and go without judgment. It encourages a calm and accepting mindset, helping you find inner stability amidst changing feelings.

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  • The Middle Way through Mindful Sculpting is a practice detailed in The Art of Feeling at Home. It invites you to explore balance and self-awareness through creative, hands-on sculpting, using mindfulness to find a middle path between effort and ease. 

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  • 14. Turning on the Light Practice explores gently facing personal fears with compassion and mindfulness. "Turning on the light" symbolizes bringing awareness to hidden or challenging emotions, inviting clarity and gradual growth through honest inner inquiry.

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  • A.C.O.R.N. builds upon the practice of Navigating Difficult Emotions, expanding its focus to include a creative dimension. Inspired by the well-known R.A.I.N. meditation, developed by Michelle McDonald and popularised by Tara Brach, A.C.O.R.N. deepens the approach of recognizing and accepting emotions by inviting active engagement and transformation.  

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  • Focused breathing to anchor yourself in the present, creating a sense of calm and stability amidst challenges.

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  • Handling Anger and Other Challenging Emotions is a practice that helps you mindfully acknowledge and explore intense feelings with compassion, creating space for understanding and balanced responses.Incorporating the A.C.O.R.N practice into dealing with anger encourages a holistic approach to navigating difficult emotions. It invites us to explore, understand, and ultimately find peace within...

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  • 18. Mindful Meditation Self-Compassion: This practice encourages being kind and gentle with yourself. It involves acknowledging your struggles with mindfulness and offering yourself compassion, fostering inner warmth and resilience. The book has several creative approaches to exploring self-compassion, allowing for a deeper and more personalised practice.  

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  • P.L.A.Y is a practice I created to help engage with life’s challenges through a playful and mindful approach. It emphasizes creating a “potential space” where creativity and authenticity can thrive, allowing individuals to explore their emotions deeply and meaningfully. By focusing on Presence, Letting go, Acceptance, and Yielding, this practice cultivates curiosity, adaptability,...

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  • 20. No Mud, No Lotus Meditation: is a practice that acknowledges the essential connection between challenges and growth. Inspired by the lotus flower that blooms from muddy waters, this meditation invites you to embrace difficulties as opportunities for transformation. By cultivating mindfulness, you explore how pain and adversity can lead to resilience, wisdom, and inner beauty.

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  • Duality Mindfulness Practice that explore opposing emotions or experiences through writing and art. It helps you find balance and deepen self-awareness amidst life’s contrasts. 

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  • Doubt and Trust Practice uses the A.C.O.R.N. method (Allow, Create, Observe, Relies, Nourish) to explore self-doubt and limiting beliefs. It encourages gentle inquiry and compassion, fostering self-awareness and opening space for personal growth and new possibilities.

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  • 23. Mountain meditation : is a key practice in the MBSR (Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction) course. It cultivates strength and stability by visualizing yourself as a steady, unshaken mountain, fostering resilience and inner calm. 

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  • A.C.O.R.N. of Forgiveness is a practice focused on cultivating forgiveness as a path for growth. By acknowledging pain and accepting our own and others' mistakes, we nurture the seeds of forgiveness, allowing healing and transformation to flourish. 

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  • A.C.O.R.N. of Generosity is a practice that encourages cultivating generosity with mindfulness and creativity. It involves acknowledging abundance, giving selflessly, opening your heart to others' needs, and releasing anticipations. Through creative acts of giving—whether time, resources, or knowledge—you nurture the joy of generosity, continuously finding new ways to contribute...

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  • A.C.O.R.N of Compassion is a practice for nurturing compassion towards yourself, others, and the world through mindfulness and creativity. It’s a continuous journey of reconnecting with your heart and embracing kindness. This meditation encourages creative expressions of compassion, like writing, art, or acts of kindness, to deepen empathy and understanding in all aspects of life. Return...

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  • A.C.O.R.N. of Love is a guided meditation inspired by Buddhist loving-kindness practices, incorporating mindfulness and creativity. It leads you through steps to acknowledge, create, observe, release, and nurture love within yourself and your relationships. Rooted in the essence of Metta, this practice encourages creative expressions of love and compassion—through art, writing, or acts...

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Courses and retreats

  • Courses, workshops, and retreatsThe mindfulness approach tools are proven in research to help reduce stress and cope with emotional dysregulation. It is now known that attentiveness allows the development of communication skills, emotion regulation, and mental clarity through intentional and non-judgmental attention to sensations, thoughts, and emotions in the present tense. Creation allows...

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  • Brain training to cultivate mental and emotional well-being even in challenging times

    In the workshop, we will learn about and experience a practice based on brain research. This research proves that a short workout per day can change brain functions and improve the quality of life when dealing with challenges and solving problems.  Each session includes theoretical background, practice, and sharing. Between the sessions, personal practice is sent,  How...

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  • Shared humanity, lecture and workshop at the art therapy conference in Riga.

    This story began in 2020 and brought me to give a lecture and workshop at the European Conference of Art Therapy, held in Riga. It all started during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic when we were all in lockdown. Despite the pressure and worry, inspiring initiatives started to emerge, promoting connection even in a time of isolation.New opportunities were created, how to find freedom within...

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  • Brain training - The most important thing, now.

Treatments

  • Online Emotional Therapy The Art of Feeling at Home

    In the challenges of life, stress, and anxiety, there’s an opportunity to find moments of calm, connect inwardly, and feel more at home with yourself. I am here to offer empathetic and professional support, directly from the comfort of your own space.    With over 20 years of experience in emotional therapy. Since the epidemic also facilitating online workshops, and as...

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  • The integration of the mindfulness approach in mental health therapy was developed as a therapeutic intervention about 40 years ago by the scientist, author, and professor of medicine John Kabat-Zin.Mindfulness has been proven in research to help reduce stress and cope with a lack of emotional regulation. It is now known that the practice of access tools contributes to the development of...

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Fertility, Pregnancy and Childbirth - The Gaya Met

The Gaya method was created during an advanced pregnancy, an encounter between an emotional state of anxiety and a state of mind of creativity.

The tools of the method were formulated through study, practice, and in-depth introspection and are based on approaches and methods that combine meditation, focus, and creativity in healing processes, which I learned in the years preceding the development of the method. Later in Ilana Shemesh's book "Giving Birth at Home", a chapter was devoted to describing the need for emotional preparation and the tools of the method.

More details about Gaia can be found here.

In my work with women in fertility, pregnancy, and postpartum, it is possible to reduce disturbing thoughts, criticisms, anxiety, and emotions that obscure the ability to see the good.

The tools and the practice make it possible to cultivate a creative ability in the here and now, which affects the functions of the brain, as can be explained today thanks to brain studies, the fact that the brain is flexible and that its functioning is influenced by the right / because of experiences and phenomena in life experiences or from patterns of behavior and thought.

The process is like a star trip, where you get to know the center point from which we will leave and to which we will return, the exploration and observation at an always customized personal pace. The goal is to allow you to choose a new path for coping with the unknown towards pregnancy, during pregnancy, and after childbirth.

Here is a story that gives both a taste of what you do in the sessions and a process that started from a blockage and ended with a birth.

Noa arrived because she received a recommendation for a first appointment, the night before the start of the IVF process, because of what she already had to lose.

There was only a faint mention of previous birth experiences and their impact on her current attitude towards pregnancy in general and childbirth in particular.

In a gentle and attentive process, we addressed the experiences of loss of control and helplessness, limitless intrusion "because they cut me everything in my stomach is ruined, blocked" there was tremendous anger at the staff and especially anger at her coping.

How to be in the presence of such a situation of vulnerability and helplessness? Practice sometimes lying down and paying attention to the body, sometimes a piece that reflected possibilities that she could not think about when the thought was hazy with tears flooding.

Noa persevered in the practice of attention and attending the sessions, slowly becoming able to react differently to the feeling of distrust and helplessness. Recognition of the ability to forgive and accept the situation as it is.

The sessions were as an anchor to allow all emotions to float, to give attitude to the body. Talk and experiment with other possibilities of being with sensations, thoughts, and feelings, with the fact that there is no control in any situation.

She shared that something is happening, like a new order in relationships in the workplace (which has changed), with the spouse and children.

One morning she almost skipped into the room and when she sat down on the mattress, she put her hands on the floor and said I'm putting it here. "I'm pregnant, spontaneous like that all of a sudden...." And a big smile spread across her face, she added that this is what we have at the moment and it's good.

Along with the pregnancy, the anxieties returned and in each session, attention was given to what is now, for now, the sixth week pregnant. Seventh... Eighth... A challenging practice of being in pleasure with the pregnancy that is currently present.

Pregnancy at risk and continued to arrive, climbing stairs slowly, with constipation and breathing. The weeks passed and the stomach became present, meaningful practice of how to be present in the here and now in the body and not let anxiety manage things.

Weeks and months pass in the "most unphotographed pregnancy" she said when she laughed and approved a one-time photo that does not include a face at week 35. At week 37, she admitted that she felt that there was an agreement to communicate internally with the person within whom she was emerging and already really big and that the direction was clear, she would be next to her.

The reference to childbirth in subsequent sessions included a reference to the possibility of a corrective experience. How significant the words are when it is going to be "cesarean delivery" and not surgery, it is possible to breathe a little better.

Setting clear boundaries and focusing attention on what is good. At the last meeting, which was two days before the birth, we hugged and decided that when the time came after, we would meet again.

On the afternoon of the appointed date, two days after our meeting, I received a picture from the delivery room of a happy smiling Noa holding a stunning baby in her hands.

Reflexives essays and practise

Welcome to the Articles and Practices Space.
Here, you will find inspiring articles and content drawn from personal and clinical experience in working with trauma, crises, and emotional healing. This space offers practical tools for incorporating mindfulness and creativity into everyday life, along with practices inviting you to pause, breathe, and connect to a quiet inner place. These articles and practices are designed to support your personal journey—whether you're just starting out or looking to deepen, grow, and heal.

  • * This article is part of a book of conference articles titled "Autism Talk," published in 2017.

    The purpose of this article* is to explore the integration of mindfulness and creative practices within therapeutic settings, highlighting their contributions to emotional regulation and the enhancement of balance. This integration can be particularly valuable for professionals in the therapeutic field, educators, and parents, as it nurtures a growth mindset, lays the foundation for conducive...

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  • This article is part of a book of conference articles titled "Autism Talk," published in 2017.

    Although children with ASD receive treatment in educational and therapeutic settings, the primary and most significant contributors to a child’s development are their parents. Research has shown that parents of children with autism experience higher levels of stress compared to parents of children with other disabilities or developmental delays. Importantly, a study has demonstrated...

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  • During a conference focused on different approaches to integrating mindfulness into daily life, Jon Kabat-Zinn leaned closer to the camera and, almost whispering, said something that surprised and moved everyone: "Practicing mindfulness is like making love with life."  I imagine that if someone had said this to me before October 1993, I wouldn’t have understood what...

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  • In times of stress and tension, we all need small moments of calm and inner connection. Meditation can be a wonderful way to ease worries and gently bring our attention back to the present moment.  You don’t have to sit still to practice. Presence can be found in everyday activities that invite creativity and enjoyment. Imagine yourself baking cookies—feeling the dough’s...

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  • The practice offered here is as an effective and simple lifeline, for creating optimism now.

  • Glad to invite you to attend the First Zoom session  In a series of 8 sessions.  We will meet through mindfulness approach and creation with essential content that engages us all,  How to reduce suffering and practice inner freedom in any situation.  To feel at home in a spacious comfort ourselves.  When ?  The first Sunday of every...

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  • Mindfulness and creativity are intimately connected approaches that naturally enhance the psychotherapeutic journey, offering a pathway for profound healing and personal exploration. As a therapist grounded in the practices of mindfulness-based and creative psychotherapy, I invite you to delve into the transformative potential that this integrative approach holds.  Mindfulness,...

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  • The way sound and speech effect our sense of connection and belonging.

    The connection between the quality of sound and the quality of speech and its influence on our well-being is a fascinating topic.When I was first exposed almost 30 years ago to how sounds, tones, speech intonations, and speech styles immediately affect our physical, mental, and emotional state, I gradually discovered how to cope with situations where we have no control over what is said to...

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