Dr — Joe Dispenza

The "Dispenza story" boils down to this: By changing your thoughts and emotions, you can change your brain’s wiring (neuroplasticity) and even your body’s chemistry (epigenetics). He teaches specific meditation-based protocols to help people "break the habit of being themselves"—meaning, to stop replaying the same anxious, angry, or sad patterns and create a new, healed personality.

At age 23, Dispenza was a chiropractor and competitive triathlete. While competing in a triathlon in Oregon, his bike was struck by a pickup truck that ran a stop sign. He was thrown 15 feet, breaking in his spine. Doctors told him the standard medical solution was a risky spinal fusion surgery (inserting metal rods into his back), warning that without it he would likely become paralyzed from the waist down.

Here is the core of his story:

This experience led him to ask: If I can do this with my spine, can others learn to do this with their health, anxiety, addiction, or trauma?

He left his private practice and began studying neuroscience, epigenetics, and quantum physics. He became a leading voice in the field of —the brain’s ability to change itself through thought and experience. Dr Joe Dispenza

He visualized, in extreme detail, his vertebrae knitting back together. He imagined his spinal cord healing. He refused to visualize himself in pain or in a wheelchair. He even had friends write him letters describing his future self—fully healed and active. He would lie in a hospital bed for hours each day, mentally rehearsing every movement of healing at a cellular level.

Within 10 weeks, he was walking. Within 12 weeks, he was back in his office seeing patients (wearing a back brace). After 10 months, an X-ray confirmed what he felt: He had no paralysis, no chronic pain, and returned to full athletic activity, including surfing and triathlons. The "Dispenza story" boils down to this: By

Dispenza refused the surgery. He believed that thoughts and focused intention could influence physical matter—including bone. Instead of the operation, he spent in a self-designed mental rehabilitation program.

He co-starred in the film What the Bleep Do We Know!? (2004), which brought his story to millions. His books— Evolve Your Brain , Breaking the Habit of Being Yourself , and You Are the Placebo —became international bestsellers. While competing in a triathlon in Oregon, his

In short,