25 05, 2026

Nasal breathing vs mouth breathing – how the different ways of breathing affect your health and your emotional world

By |2026-05-27T21:49:22+02:00May 25th, 2026|Basics, Blog, Endocrine system, Immune system, Intestinal health, Mitochondria, Natural help, Nervous system, Psyche, Stress, Tips & Tricks, Vegetative nervous system|

There is one aspect of health that is so commonplace that it is hardly ever consciously noticed - which is precisely why it is so often underestimated: breathing. Of course you know that fresh air is good for you. That hiking in the mountains or by the sea is good for you. But the crucial question is not which air you breathe in - but how you breathe in the first place. And even more specifically: Do you breathe through your nose or through your mouth? This one question - as simple as it sounds - has far-reaching consequences for your entire organism, for your nervous system, your immune system, your sleep, your emotional state and even your self-esteem.

17 05, 2026

The paradise of kitchen herbs – the healing power of our spice drawer

By |2026-05-17T21:47:27+02:00May 17th, 2026|Blog, Intestinal flora, Intestinal health, Medicinal plants, Natural help, Recipes, Tips & Tricks|

Imagine reaching for a medicine every day that you don't have to buy at the pharmacy, that doesn't need a package insert and that gives your food both soul and flavor. That's exactly what herbs are - and most of us vastly underestimate them. In many kitchens, parsley, basil or thyme end up on the plate as a pretty decoration at best. What lies behind them - a centuries-old healing art, a biochemical powerhouse, a direct communication channel to your body - usually goes unnoticed. This article aims to change that.

13 05, 2026

Why we women can – and should – have mood swings

By |2026-05-13T11:57:24+02:00May 13th, 2026|Blog, Endocrine system, Nervous system, Psyche, Self-knowledge, Tips & Tricks|

"You're so sensitive again today." "Are you on your period?" "So moody again?" How often have we women heard these sentences - as a reproach, as an attempt to explain, as a condescending categorization of our emotional world. As if emotional flexibility is a flaw, a malfunction, something that is best trained away or at least well hidden. In reality, these phrases describe something profoundly biological, feminine - and completely healthy: the hormonal dynamics of the female cycle.mood swings in women are not a whim, an exaggeration or a sign of weakness. They are the vivid, measurable expression of a finely tuned hormonal orchestra that takes you through four clearly distinguishable phases month after month - each with its own biochemical signature, its own emotional quality, its own physical expressions. Those who know these phases understand themselves in a way that no personality test in the world can. Because this is not about character. It's about chemistry - and how deeply this chemistry reaches into our psyche, our perception and our relationships.this article is an invitation to re-read your cycle. Not as a problem that needs to be solved. But as a source of information, as an inner map, as a monthly offer from your body to get to know yourself better.

9 05, 2026

Chronic sinusitis – symptoms in the head – cause in the intestine

By |2026-05-09T05:42:08+02:00May 9th, 2026|Blog, Immune system, Intestinal flora, Intestinal health, Intestinal rehabilitation, Organs & Systems, Tips & Tricks|

Do you sometimes have the feeling that one sinusitis follows the next? That your sinuses have been pressing, clogged and inflamed for months or years - and no remedy really helps in the long term? Chronic sinusitis is one of the most common complaints that people come to my practice with - and one that they often carry with them for a long time because they can't really get a grip on it. At some point, you put up with it because there are supposedly not many therapeutic options. But that's not true. What is regularly overlooked is the connection to the small intestine.

5 05, 2026

The power of singing – and what it does for you

By |2026-05-05T05:33:01+02:00May 5th, 2026|Blog, Endocrine system, Immune system, Nervous system, Psyche, Stress|

There are moments when a song can do more than any pill. An old pop song that suddenly comes on the radio and immediately lifts your spirits. A song that you hum while cooking without realizing it - and suddenly your inner tension is a little lighter. This is no coincidence. Singing is one of the oldest and most underestimated health practices we know. And the great thing about it is that you don't have to have a good voice to benefit.

27 04, 2026

The vagus nerve – your inner reset button to find your center again

By |2026-04-27T05:41:44+02:00April 27th, 2026|Basics, Blog, Endocrine system, Immune system, Nervous system, Organs & Systems, Stress, Tips & Tricks|

There is a nerve in your body that is as old as life in community. A nerve that has sensed whether you are safe - or not - long before you had speech. Whether you can open up - or whether you need to protect yourself. This nerve is the vagus nerve, and it is far more than just an anatomical detail from a biology book. It is something like your inner conductor, your seismograph for safety, your silent mediator between soul and body.

23 04, 2026

Weight training for women: How training changes your life and why it’s so hugely valuable – way beyond building muscle

By |2026-04-23T05:03:45+02:00April 23rd, 2026|Basics, Blog, Endocrine system, Immune system, Natural help, Sport, Stress, Tips & Tricks|

Strength training for women: How training changes your life and why it is so enormously valuable - far beyond muscle building Weight training for women - When I mention the word "weight training" to women, I sometimes see that brief moment of hesitation. It's as if an old image silently pops up

19 04, 2026

Fluoride and its immense effect on the thyroid gland – a society in depression

By |2026-04-19T05:27:12+02:00April 19th, 2026|Basics, Blog, Endocrine system, Immune system, Organs & Systems, Teeth, Tips & Tricks|

There are substances that we take so much for granted that we have stopped questioning them. Fluoride is one of them. It is found in the toothpaste we squeeze onto our toothbrushes every morning, in the drinking water of some countries, in processed foods, in pesticides on conventionally grown vegetables, in teas and in certain medicines. From childhood to old age, modern society consumes fluoride daily and in multiple forms - often without knowing it, almost always without wanting to.

15 04, 2026

Tooth-organ relationships – The connection between tooth, organ and emotion – an overview

By |2026-04-15T05:36:50+02:00April 15th, 2026|Blog, Organs & Systems, Teeth, Tips & Tricks|

The mouth is not an island. It is part of the body - and that sounds so obvious that you hardly need to say it. And yet for decades, conventional dentistry has treated teeth as if they were independent of everything else: repaired, crowned, filled, extracted - without asking what this tooth might have to do with the rest of the body.

7 04, 2026

Hormonal imbalance or: the completely underestimated hormone disaster of our modern age

By |2026-04-07T07:31:56+02:00April 7th, 2026|Blog, Endocrine system, Intestinal health, Intestinal rehabilitation, Nutrition, Organs & Systems|

You may be familiar with this from those around you: more and more women are complaining about irregular cycles, PMS, the agonizing feeling of exhaustion shortly before their period, stubborn weight gain, mood swings that can hardly be explained - or menopausal symptoms that seem to start earlier and are more severe than in the previous generation. And more and more men are reporting declining vitality, diminishing libido, emotional emptiness, lack of drive or belly fat that persists despite exercise. In children and adolescents of both sexes, we are seeing alarmingly early puberty, acne and mood instability. What is going on? Why do the hormones of an entire society seem to be out of balance? The answer is not simple - but it is instructive. Hormonal problems rarely arise from a single factor. They are an expression of a system that has come under pressure. A body that reacts more sensitively than we thought for a long time. And a time that wears on us - on levels that we often don't even fully understand.

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