Foundations · This is why

The thinking behind the practice.

01
4 min read

Why energy?

Long before anyone spoke of biology, healers across the world described the body in terms of energy and flow — prana in India, qi in China, and countless traditions besides, worked with for thousands of years. Pathogen Balance sits in that lineage.

When we say “energy,” we don’t offer it as a claim about physics. We mean it as an old and useful way of paying attention to how a person feels — where they seem stuck, and where things begin to move freely again.

02
3 min read

What is balance?

Balance is simply the state a body and mind tend toward when nothing is pulling them out of shape: steady, resourced, at ease. Life rarely leaves us there for long — stress, strain, grief and plain busyness all tug us off centre.

The traditions this practice draws on treat that centre as something worth tending. Not a fixed point to arrive at, but a balance to keep returning to.

03
4 min read

Why do we fall out of balance?

In the language of these traditions, energy can become stuck, stagnant or trapped — and where it doesn’t move freely, we can feel it as tension, low mood, tiredness or unease.

This is a way of describing experience, not a medical account of illness. If something is genuinely wrong, that is a question for a doctor. What this practice offers is gentler and more everyday: help returning to balance when life has knocked you out of it.

04
3 min read

Why does distance not matter?

This is the part most people raise an eyebrow at, and fairly. Pendulum dowsing has been practised at a distance for as long as it has been practised at all, and Gen works almost entirely remotely — finding the same results whether a client is in the room or on the other side of the world.

There is no established physical mechanism for this, and we won’t pretend otherwise. We can only say that it is how the work has always been done, and how it continues to work in practice.

05
5 min read

The body as an intelligent system.

Whatever you make of energy, one thing isn’t in doubt: the body is astonishingly self-regulating. It heals wounds, fights infection, balances its own temperature and chemistry, and rights itself constantly without instruction.

Much of what this practice does is best understood as getting out of that system’s way — easing the load, settling the nervous system, and letting the body’s own intelligence do what it does best. On that much, at least, modern physiology and these old traditions quietly agree.

06
3 min read

Let’s talk about “pathogens.”

The name catches people out, so it’s worth being clear. “Pathogen” comes from the Greek páthos — suffering — and once meant, broadly, a creator of suffering. That older, wider sense is how the word is used here.

This practice does not test for, diagnose or treat medical pathogens; bacteria, viruses and the like are the province of doctors and laboratories. When we speak of pathogens, we mean it in its original, energetic sense: whatever seems to be leaving someone out of sorts.

07
5 min read

Frequently asked questions.

Is this medical treatment?

No. It is a complementary wellbeing practice. Gen doesn’t diagnose, doesn’t prescribe, and it is never a substitute for seeing your doctor.

Is there scientific evidence?

Energy healing is classified by bodies such as the US National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health as a “mind and body” practice. Honestly: the evidence is limited and mixed, the clearest documented benefit is deep relaxation and its knock-on effects on stress, and there is no agreed physical mechanism. We offer it as support, not as a cure.

Do I need to be present?

No — sessions are done remotely, in your own time.

Can I keep seeing my doctor?

Please do. This sits alongside conventional care, never instead of it.

Further reading

If you’d like to read further.

National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health The US government’s research centre for complementary health — a balanced, evidence-first place to start. “Clinical Studies of Biofield Therapies” (Jain et al., 2015) An academic review of the research into energy healing, and of its limits. Dowsing & Radiesthesia Background on the history of pendulum dowsing — and the debate around it. Gen’s interview with Mystic Magazine Her own account of how she came to this work.

To go deeper: Richard Gerber, Vibrational Medicine; Barbara Brennan, Hands of Light; Lynne McTaggart, The Field.

Foundations is the why. The Practice is the how →
PATHOGEN BALANCE · ESTABLISHED 2018