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230 result(s) for "Gilbert, Hugh"
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GILBERT-4210245
Edward Hugh Gilbert Edward Hugh Gilbert, 89, died April 25, 2010, at Highlands Rehab and Health Care Center in Bella Vista, Ark., after a happy, full and satisfying life that left its mark on many people. He was born in Millerton, Okla., Oct. 27, 1920, the first of nine children of Thomas Cawood Gilbert and Edna Ruth Gilbert. He was preceded in death by his first wife, Armelda; a daughter, Sheree; brothers, Cawood and William; and sisters, Joyce Penington and Ruth Denham. Surviving are his brothers; Raymond, Lainial and Allen; a sister, Mae Hollis; and many nieces and nephews. He also leaves his wife, Joyce and a stepfamily: Mark and Mary Moore, Cindy and David Duckworth and six grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.
Scottish abbot tipped to be next leader of England's Catholics
A MONK at a Scottish abbey is a frontrunner to replace Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor as leader of the Catholic Church in England and Wales, it was reported last night. Hugh Gilbert, 55, the abbot of Pluscarden Abbey in Elgin, Moray, could replace Murphy-O'Connor when he retires this year. A convert to Catholicism, Gilbert attended St Paul's School and King's College London before becoming a monk in 1974. He was elected abbot in 1992 at Pluscarden, which is now home to 27 monks.
Can myofascial release resolve trauma?
When people encounter a traumatic event, [Hugh Gilbert] says, they instinctively react by a fight or flight response. If they can do neither, they freeze. He gives the example of being caught in traffic, looking in the rearview mirror and seeing a truck that you know won't be able to stop in time. Everything in the body tenses in anticipation of the crash. You say \"Oh my God!\" and then, bang!, you get hit. Every emotion you had in that second is trapped or frozen in the fascia, he says. \"He'll start talking about it, releasing the pain and trauma by reliving it,\" Gilbert says. He's seen patients shake and sweat as they let go of memories and emotions that have been trapped for years. \"Patients basically heal themselves,\" he says. After myofascial release, a patient will say things like, \"I finally feel like myself again,\" or \"My sense of calm has returned,\" Gilbert says. Sometimes a patient leaves then complains days later of feeling more pain and thinks the physiotherapist caused it or becomes angry from a perceived lack of care, but it's actually trauma, fear or abuse percolating its way out of the body.
FORMER INMATE FIGHTS BAN ON HAVING ABORTION
A state Supreme Court justice has issued a temporary order barring a former jail inmate from having an abortion until a court hearing on whether county corrections officials should pay for the procedure.
SOUTH CAROLINA ADMINISTRATIVE LAW COURT ISSUES DECISION REGARDING S.C. DEPARTMENT OF MOTOR VEHICLES VS. HUGH GILBERT DAVIS
Respondent: [Hugh Gilbert Davis] DOCKET NUMBER: 06-ALJ-21-0078-AP APPEARANCES: n/a ORDERS: ORDER OF DISMISSAL
The big thaw: Disturbing flashbacks triggered by some therapies are being successfully treated in a controversial process some call 'thawing.'
When people encounter a traumatic event, [Hugh Gilbert] says, they instinctively react by a fight or flight response. If they can do neither, they freeze. He gives the example of being caught in traffic, looking in the rearview mirror and seeing a truck that you know won't be able to stop in time. Everything in the body tenses in anticipation of the crash. You say \"Oh my God!\" and then, bang!, you get hit. Every emotion you had in that second is trapped or frozen in the fascia, he says. \"He'll start talking about it, releasing the pain and trauma by reliving it,\" Gilbert says. He's seen patients shake and sweat as they let go of memories and emotions that have been trapped for years. \"Patients basically heal themselves,\" he says. After myofascial release, a patient will say things like, \"I finally feel like myself again,\" or \"My sense of calm has returned,\" Gilbert says. Sometimes a patient leaves then complains days later of feeling more pain and thinks the physiotherapist caused it or becomes angry from a perceived lack of care, but it's actually trauma, fear or abuse percolating its way out of the body.
The big thaw: Disturbing flashbacks triggered by some therapies are being successfully treated in a controversial process some call 'thawing.'
When people encounter a traumatic event, [Hugh Gilbert] says, they instinctively react by a fight or flight response. If they can do neither, they freeze. He gives the example of being caught in traffic, looking in the rearview mirror and seeing a truck that you know won't be able to stop in time. Everything in the body tenses in anticipation of the crash. You say \"Oh my God!\" and then, bang!, you get hit. Every emotion you had in that second is trapped or frozen in the fascia, he says. \"He'll start talking about it, releasing the pain and trauma by reliving it,\" Gilbert says. He's seen patients shake and sweat as they let go of memories and emotions that have been trapped for years. \"Patients basically heal themselves,\" he says. After myofascial release, a patient will say things like, \"I finally feel like myself again,\" or \"My sense of calm has returned,\" Gilbert says. Sometimes a patient leaves then complains days later of feeling more pain and thinks the physiotherapist caused it or becomes angry from a perceived lack of care, but it's actually trauma, fear or abuse percolating its way out of the body.