I arrived in the field, like many others at the time, not out of a conscious and deliberate choice, but out of curiosity and interest in broadening my horizons.
As a child, I shied away from people. I preferred to be a “good girl,” avoiding conflict. I was curious about how life works and why. I excelled with animals, was creative in drawing, sculpture, and art. I considered focusing on these areas and studying veterinary medicine or art. In the army, I was assigned a leadership position that included teaching, and once again, new abilities revealed themselves to me.
After four years of service, I got married and had my son and home. Being a mother was, and still is, the greatest adventure of all. I chose to study art and was accepted into an art school. Then, “by chance,” I was drawn to a reflexology course, “just out of curiosity…” but I was pulled with tremendous force into another world. A world of people asking questions, seeking healing for others and themselves, remaining loyal to the “path of seekers” even when the environment isn’t supportive. Since then, 25 years have passed. Twenty-five years of searching for the “gold” – knowledge about the mind, the soul, the path to health, and fulfillment.
This is a search that never tires and remains thirsty for more and more. For ten years, I studied tirelessly, delving into various complementary medicine professions, teaching, and continuing my quest. The more I added, the greater my thirst for knowledge grew.
I introduced many innovations to the field of reflexology, including personality diagnosis through the feet.
I delivered lectures on almost every aspect of human life: relationships, parenting, finding purpose, dreams, the mind-body connection, and many other topics. By chance, I appeared in every possible media outlet: numerous television programs, newspapers, radio shows, and lectures before diverse audiences, even those outside the direct professional field. Without realizing it, I began to understand that complete satisfaction remained elusive. Curiosity never waned. The world didn’t reveal itself in love, and fear persisted. To some extent, I was a successful woman, but I didn’t feel that way. I embarked on the quest again. The hunger was even greater than before, accompanied by immense frustration. I realized that for many years, I had collected professional tools, but I placed much less emphasis on the content – that inner essence that defines who I am beyond my professional labels. The search for self is a lifelong journey, continually unfolding in the face of life’s myriad experiences. The self is multidimensional. This ongoing familiarity with the various facets within me is both endless and challenging. A vast world of options and aspects of my personality unfolds: the multidimensional therapist, the multidimensional mother, the multidimensional woman, the multidimensional member of society, and each day brings more. When I look at myself from the side, it’s as if I’m playing an enormous puzzle. And someday, on a clear day, I hope to see it whole. To all those who, like me, are seekers and remain loyal to the “path of seekers,” I would be happy to share what I’ve achieved so far.