Patricia Posthumus
Hillcrest KZN ZA
Hi, my name is Patricia - thank you for visiting my Bio Page.
INTERESTS
I have been interested in Alternative Therapies for many years and enjoyed the opportunity to study with several wonderful teachers, searching for THAT which the BodyTalk System eventually delivered. Some of my training includes : Aromatherapy Massage, Reflexology, Reiki, Aura Soma, Radionics and Dowsing, Geo-biology, Freedom through Release, DNA Activation, Amplified Healing, the Energetics of Food, introduction course in Macrobiotic Cooking, Astrology and Feng Shui to name a few. And then BodyTalk – we (my husband Rodney and I) started with an Access Class and progressed to qualifying as a Certified BodyTalk Practitioner and continued training in several advanced modules.
SOCIAL INTERACTION
During 1996 Wayne Herschel requested my participation in his now published book “The Hidden Records”
In 1997 I was invited to attend the first Healing Summit in Monterey California – joining 220 participants from 22 countries.
I was then introduced to Tim and Myrna, leaders for the ‘The Pilgrimage of the Middle Passage’, and asked to join their group as strategic planner in early 1999
Followed by an invitation to take on the role as the Kwa Zulu Natal Representative and co-ordinator for the Parliament of World Religions held in Cape Town South Africa in December 1999 where 13,000 people from many different religions and many different places around the world, gathered to share common, mutually beneficial interactions and communications
Then in 2000 I was invited to participate in a Peace Walk in Japan. Prof. Nara from Tokyo was the organiser and Tom, an elder from the Wabanaki Nation was the leader, with 4 other US citizens and I, together with committed Japanese participants, walked from Tokyo to Hiroshima ... 1,000kms in 55 days. A life changing experience and great privilege.
During 2003 I trained with a local Hospice Organisation in Palliative Home Care for cancer patients and became involved in a project for disadvantaged Aids patients, eventually persuading the local Government/State run TB Hospital to admit these patients. The facilities were far superior to anything we could have put in place – both in terms of medical expertise, medical supplies and equipment. Before the hospital option, the most important task was ensuring the patients received fresh, wholesome food which we were able to source from local sup