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But You Look Fine
Health coach, patient advocate and wellness advisor, Amy Kurtz, breaks the silence about the crucial, painful, pervasive, and yet all too common phase of healing from chronic illness that has long gone overlooked ⦠until now.Ā
According to the Center for Disease Control, 194 million Americansāor 76.4% of the populationāhave at least one chronic illness, and half of them are women. While many of these individuals finally have a diagnosis, and are no longer āsickā, theyāre still not āwell.ā Theyāve gone through the treatments, taken the medications, and yet still find themselves suffering.Ā
So, what do you do after youāve discovered the root of your condition, and youāre still not healed? How do you move past the trauma of being diagnosed (which often takes years for many patients), as well as the trauma of now living with this condition. More importantly, what is this limbo between sick and well that so many patients find themselves in? Ā Ā Ā
The answer is Medical Trauma Brain, a phrase Health coach and patient advocate Amy Kurtz coined after years of research into her own challenges with misdiagnosed Lyme disease. Medical Trauma Brain is the trauma that hangs on pervasively even after the patient is ācuredā keeping them stuck in the hell between sick and well. Itās the most overlooked but crucial part of healing, and in But You Look Fine, Amy shares the exact plan she used to move through this integral part of recovery so others can finally break free from their own bridge between sick and well. Ā Ā
āAmy Kurtz exposes a common occurrence that until now has gone unnamed and undiscussed by doctors and patients alike. Not only does she reveal this roadblock to wellness, but she also offers solutions, ones that we can all apply to our lives whether chronically ill, newly diagnosed, or labeled ācured.ā This is a paradigm shifting book and a must-read.ā Ā āMark Hyman, MD
According to the Center for Disease Control, 194 million Americansāor 76.4% of the populationāhave at least one chronic illness, and half of them are women. While many of these individuals finally have a diagnosis, and are no longer āsickā, theyāre still not āwell.ā Theyāve gone through the treatments, taken the medications, and yet still find themselves suffering.Ā
So, what do you do after youāve discovered the root of your condition, and youāre still not healed? How do you move past the trauma of being diagnosed (which often takes years for many patients), as well as the trauma of now living with this condition. More importantly, what is this limbo between sick and well that so many patients find themselves in? Ā Ā Ā
The answer is Medical Trauma Brain, a phrase Health coach and patient advocate Amy Kurtz coined after years of research into her own challenges with misdiagnosed Lyme disease. Medical Trauma Brain is the trauma that hangs on pervasively even after the patient is ācuredā keeping them stuck in the hell between sick and well. Itās the most overlooked but crucial part of healing, and in But You Look Fine, Amy shares the exact plan she used to move through this integral part of recovery so others can finally break free from their own bridge between sick and well. Ā Ā
āAmy Kurtz exposes a common occurrence that until now has gone unnamed and undiscussed by doctors and patients alike. Not only does she reveal this roadblock to wellness, but she also offers solutions, ones that we can all apply to our lives whether chronically ill, newly diagnosed, or labeled ācured.ā This is a paradigm shifting book and a must-read.ā Ā āMark Hyman, MD
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But You Look Fine
But You Look Fine
Health coach, patient advocate and wellness advisor, Amy Kurtz, breaks the silence about the crucial, painful, pervasive, and yet all too common phase of healing from chronic illness that has long gone overlooked ⦠until now.Ā
According to the Center for Disease Control, 194 million Americansāor 76.4% of the populationāhave at least one chronic illness, and half of them are women. While many of these individuals finally have a diagnosis, and are no longer āsickā, theyāre still not āwell.ā Theyāve gone through the treatments, taken the medications, and yet still find themselves suffering.Ā
So, what do you do after youāve discovered the root of your condition, and youāre still not healed? How do you move past the trauma of being diagnosed (which often takes years for many patients), as well as the trauma of now living with this condition. More importantly, what is this limbo between sick and well that so many patients find themselves in? Ā Ā Ā
The answer is Medical Trauma Brain, a phrase Health coach and patient advocate Amy Kurtz coined after years of research into her own challenges with misdiagnosed Lyme disease. Medical Trauma Brain is the trauma that hangs on pervasively even after the patient is ācuredā keeping them stuck in the hell between sick and well. Itās the most overlooked but crucial part of healing, and in But You Look Fine, Amy shares the exact plan she used to move through this integral part of recovery so others can finally break free from their own bridge between sick and well. Ā Ā
āAmy Kurtz exposes a common occurrence that until now has gone unnamed and undiscussed by doctors and patients alike. Not only does she reveal this roadblock to wellness, but she also offers solutions, ones that we can all apply to our lives whether chronically ill, newly diagnosed, or labeled ācured.ā This is a paradigm shifting book and a must-read.ā Ā āMark Hyman, MD
According to the Center for Disease Control, 194 million Americansāor 76.4% of the populationāhave at least one chronic illness, and half of them are women. While many of these individuals finally have a diagnosis, and are no longer āsickā, theyāre still not āwell.ā Theyāve gone through the treatments, taken the medications, and yet still find themselves suffering.Ā
So, what do you do after youāve discovered the root of your condition, and youāre still not healed? How do you move past the trauma of being diagnosed (which often takes years for many patients), as well as the trauma of now living with this condition. More importantly, what is this limbo between sick and well that so many patients find themselves in? Ā Ā Ā
The answer is Medical Trauma Brain, a phrase Health coach and patient advocate Amy Kurtz coined after years of research into her own challenges with misdiagnosed Lyme disease. Medical Trauma Brain is the trauma that hangs on pervasively even after the patient is ācuredā keeping them stuck in the hell between sick and well. Itās the most overlooked but crucial part of healing, and in But You Look Fine, Amy shares the exact plan she used to move through this integral part of recovery so others can finally break free from their own bridge between sick and well. Ā Ā
āAmy Kurtz exposes a common occurrence that until now has gone unnamed and undiscussed by doctors and patients alike. Not only does she reveal this roadblock to wellness, but she also offers solutions, ones that we can all apply to our lives whether chronically ill, newly diagnosed, or labeled ācured.ā This is a paradigm shifting book and a must-read.ā Ā āMark Hyman, MD
$27.99
But You Look Fineā
$27.99
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Health coach, patient advocate and wellness advisor, Amy Kurtz, breaks the silence about the crucial, painful, pervasive, and yet all too common phase of healing from chronic illness that has long gone overlooked ⦠until now.Ā
According to the Center for Disease Control, 194 million Americansāor 76.4% of the populationāhave at least one chronic illness, and half of them are women. While many of these individuals finally have a diagnosis, and are no longer āsickā, theyāre still not āwell.ā Theyāve gone through the treatments, taken the medications, and yet still find themselves suffering.Ā
So, what do you do after youāve discovered the root of your condition, and youāre still not healed? How do you move past the trauma of being diagnosed (which often takes years for many patients), as well as the trauma of now living with this condition. More importantly, what is this limbo between sick and well that so many patients find themselves in? Ā Ā Ā
The answer is Medical Trauma Brain, a phrase Health coach and patient advocate Amy Kurtz coined after years of research into her own challenges with misdiagnosed Lyme disease. Medical Trauma Brain is the trauma that hangs on pervasively even after the patient is ācuredā keeping them stuck in the hell between sick and well. Itās the most overlooked but crucial part of healing, and in But You Look Fine, Amy shares the exact plan she used to move through this integral part of recovery so others can finally break free from their own bridge between sick and well. Ā Ā
āAmy Kurtz exposes a common occurrence that until now has gone unnamed and undiscussed by doctors and patients alike. Not only does she reveal this roadblock to wellness, but she also offers solutions, ones that we can all apply to our lives whether chronically ill, newly diagnosed, or labeled ācured.ā This is a paradigm shifting book and a must-read.ā Ā āMark Hyman, MD
According to the Center for Disease Control, 194 million Americansāor 76.4% of the populationāhave at least one chronic illness, and half of them are women. While many of these individuals finally have a diagnosis, and are no longer āsickā, theyāre still not āwell.ā Theyāve gone through the treatments, taken the medications, and yet still find themselves suffering.Ā
So, what do you do after youāve discovered the root of your condition, and youāre still not healed? How do you move past the trauma of being diagnosed (which often takes years for many patients), as well as the trauma of now living with this condition. More importantly, what is this limbo between sick and well that so many patients find themselves in? Ā Ā Ā
The answer is Medical Trauma Brain, a phrase Health coach and patient advocate Amy Kurtz coined after years of research into her own challenges with misdiagnosed Lyme disease. Medical Trauma Brain is the trauma that hangs on pervasively even after the patient is ācuredā keeping them stuck in the hell between sick and well. Itās the most overlooked but crucial part of healing, and in But You Look Fine, Amy shares the exact plan she used to move through this integral part of recovery so others can finally break free from their own bridge between sick and well. Ā Ā
āAmy Kurtz exposes a common occurrence that until now has gone unnamed and undiscussed by doctors and patients alike. Not only does she reveal this roadblock to wellness, but she also offers solutions, ones that we can all apply to our lives whether chronically ill, newly diagnosed, or labeled ācured.ā This is a paradigm shifting book and a must-read.ā Ā āMark Hyman, MD












