The beauty of life lies in uncertainties and surprises. Becoming a Bioqr therapist is one of the best!
Being a yoga teacher for 10 years, mainly working with cancer patients, and also people from all walks of life suffering in different dimensions, healing became my interest and drive for learning.
I came to know a little bit about Bioqr Therapy and Ivan a few years ago when Ivan came to Hong Kong Cancer Fund to work with our cancer patients. In early 2018, the Module A course of Bioqr therapy was offered in Hong Kong, and thanks to Mona I had a chance to take the course. It was an eye-opening experience to understand the disease, health, and life on a much deeper and holistic level. I realized that Bioqr Therapy is not the kind of energy healing we know in a general sense, it is a medical/clinical treatment for physical diseases using natural bioenergy that everyone has. It is like a revolutionary discovery about a function that I didn’t know about my body. And the question is how much more we don’t know about ourselves and how much more we could learn about life and living?!
I really appreciate his enthusiasm and effort from Ivan to make the learning of this abundant and in-depth knowledge in a very systematic and logical way that is easy to understand and joyful to learn. And the support from the Biotherapy Asia team is truly wonderful.
Later I joined Module B when it is available in Hong Kong. It taps into the more advanced science and technology aspects and skills of Bioqr therapy and healing. We learned about how to conduct distant therapy, and medical psychology of group therapy, the ethics and practices of becoming a Bioqr therapist, and so much more. Again, it opens a different dimension of understanding of how life and this universe work and makes me more curious to explore and experience its possibilities.
To me, the whole system of Bioqr therapy is a reflection of humanity in a practical, but at the same time, artistic way. And the effectiveness of the healing is not only happening in the physical body, it is in the process of the experience of therapy as well, which is weaved deeply into the fabrication of life itself. Ivan has been insisting the therapy shall always be donation-based. It is not to join the fashion of charity work (even though charity work is a great part of the therapy work), but it is to allow people to do what they need to do and what they are able to do. And more importantly, it is to take away the root cause of the major misunderstanding today in society – that everything could come at a price – yet, we all know that health and life can not.
Learning about therapy is the first step, and becoming a therapist requires a lot more – to learn pathology, anatomy, medical psychology, and everything about life and living. In the beginning, no matter how much I learned, I didn’t feel confident to actually start conducting the therapy. But Ivan and the experienced therapist team have always been very encouraging and supportive to let me practice, and I learned so much more through practicing and mistakes. Later I realized that what I need is not confidence, what I need is to keep learning and practicing. The logic and the movement of the therapy slowly become muscle memory in my body. And it becomes a journey of continuous learning and exploring, which is fascinating.
And I have to say that the great reward of being a therapist is hearing the results from the ones being treated – the pain is reduced or gone, can do or eat things they can not touch before, the skin is not irritating anymore, the blood count is back to normal, the chemo is easier to cope with, or even to experience a normal day that everyone else is experiencing, but he/she could not because of the condition. It makes a difference in people’s daily life, and if we like to talk about the “positive influence on society”, this would be a great way to do it.
I am truly grateful to Ivan for sharing the knowledge and guiding me on the way to learning and growing to be a Bioqr therapist. It is an honor and blessing. A heartfelt thank you is not enough to express my gratitude. I will express it in my practice and work.