Living Your Legacy
Living Your Legacy

From Single Mom to Holistic Wellness Pioneer

1d ago20:463,038 words
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Chelsea Elizabeth never set out to build another med spa. After becoming a mother at 19, navigating divorce, working out of a spare bedroom in her home, and searching for answers to her own chronic he...

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He goes to doctors wanting to get answers when they don't have the answers an...

the best that they can with the resources that they can. What I create space for is that

I think that our bodies have the wisdom and our bodies are always talking to us.

So something that I teach is. Chelsea Elizabeth is a beauty and wellness entrepreneur, holistic institution and the founder of Salah Sanctuary Spa. Through her work, she empowers women to embrace healthy aging, restore balance and discover beauty that radiates from the inside out. Emotional state is really tied to your physical appearance. So at Salah Sanctuary, we also care for

the mind, the spirit, the emotions as well as the physical. I think it's really important

is learning how to feel through heart emotions. Those feelings, those hard feelings that we

don't want to feel, they are teachers and they are areas of growth. And so that's living your legacy podcast for those who live to live a legacy. Welcome back everybody to another episode of the inside success podcast. I'm your host Jason Tyler and I am joined here today by Chelsea and or Eva Elizabeth. Now it's Eva to those that know her. I just met her, but I'm going to go with Eva for this one. So, you know, for the editors, just

make sure you put Eva in her title card. So, Eva, do me a favor for the people who are just now

getting to know you. They're seeing you on screen now for the first time. Give me kind of a synopsis

about your sanctuary spot. Give me a synopsis on who's Eva, who am I joined here with today?

Yeah, well, I do want to talk a little bit about the whole name thing. So, Chelsea Elizabeth is the name that I was born with. It's my born name, but through the evolution of my own self-development and becoming who I am today, I feel like Eva fits me a little bit better and why do we have to keep the names that we were born with? Got it, got it, got it. So, talking to me a little bit about your business, the sanctuary spot. I want to know what got you into what made you so passionate

about it and I know you and I spoke a little bit before the cameras were on about the differences between Alapathic medicine and Western medicine and we'll get into that in a little bit because I still don't know what Alapathic means, but for now, walk me into how you started this business. Salah sanctuary is a boutique wellness spot that I've created. Salah actually means pause and breathe in Hebrew and sanctuary is a safe place of refuge. So, I am an esthetician by trade and I have created

an integrative which I can explain medical spa that incorporates the whole person. So, I don't just treat the outer appearance, but I treat the inner self. So, you're creating like a whole experience versus just a simple service that you're providing. Everything from top to bottom when people are walking into your space, you're treating them inside and out. Yes, we're treating the whole person. Mind body and soul. Yeah, because but we have the all the technologies of that Western

science has to offer. I'm under a medical director. Most medspares that you go to are very superficial. So, you go in for your Botox. You go in for your lasers. They burn your face tough or freeze your face and you leave rejuvenated or frozen and looking great, but they don't

really treat the inner self. And I believe as an esthetician and someone that focuses

in longevity and wellness that the emotional state is really tied to your physical appearance. So, at say last sanctuary, we also care for the mind, the spirit, the emotions as well as the physical. I would love to get your take on this. Actually, do you feel that our inner state of being has a direct correlation to our outward appearance when you're feeling

Crunchy on the inside?

there's a correlation between those? Oh yeah, it's science back. I know it. I know it. All right, cut the show. I figured out everything here that I need to know, but I talked to me a little bit because you mentioned Western medicine again. So, I want to just do a deep dive here on the

differences between alepathic and Western medicine. But first, I need a definition of what alepathic

needs. Alepathic medicine is the study of disease. So, that's what we focus here in, that's

what we focus on in the West is we focus on the study of disease. We don't study or we don't focus on the study of health. And health is wealth. And so, when we're focusing on the study of disease, would you say that we're not focused? I have this thing that I talk with my friends about all the time that in this country or at least like in the West, we have a weird relationship between cause and effect. Like everybody treats for the effect and nobody wants to trace the effect

back to root cause. What would you say to that? Like, what's the process behind that? Well, in the West, if you talk to any nurse or anyone that has worked in the hospitals,

they will tell you how backwards our system is. There is a saying, if I get it correctly,

and it says that energy flows where attention goes. And so, if you are always focused on

disease, then that is what's going to be expanded. It's almost like, I don't, because I don't know that I'm sick, I'm not focused on being sick. And therefore, the sickness never becomes the focal point. Once my energy, once I know that I'm sick, all of a sudden, all my symptoms are 10x. Right? All of a sudden, all my attention is on, oh my god, I can't breathe through my nose, my nose. I went from, you know, I had a slight little bit of clog and one nostril and now I'm

clogged all the way up. I had a little bit of mucus and now I can't stop coughing. Like, yeah,

it goes to what you're talking about and that like, you are, as soon as you start to focus on it

and really put your mental energy towards it, now you're exacerbating the issue. Yeah. Well, I think it goes back to what we're taught and what we're educated on. I have a fascination with the body, because they're, it's literally endless. There's so much that we don't know about the body and even the brain that Western medicine really has an even dove into, but we are taught with doctors to focus on disease. We're not taught how to focus on health.

And so that bleeds into just like our society and our culture and you can see everywhere with our food and lifestyle and it's not even diet. It's also our productivity and we're just not taught how to live in a helpful way, but it's not that the information is an out there.

So that's why I've dedicated the last four years. I'm getting a bachelor's in alternative medicine.

Just so I have like a rooted background on these things that I'm so passionate about and so I've been kind of getting an umbrella overview and a look in traditional Chinese medicine and Ayurvedic medicine and they focus on preventative health. They dive deep into the circadian rhythm of the body and how the emotional state affects the physical state. Like we're talking about before. I mean, you can even, I've seen within myself if I'm in an uncomfortable space,

or in an uncomfortable social space or in a photo shoot and I feel uncomfortable and I feel unsafe. My body, my nervous system, my sympathetic nervous system is going to rev up and then I'm going to either go into fight, flight, or freeze. A lot of the times I go into freeze. So you'll see my face shot go or like try and hide and versus if you're in a relaxed state where you feel comfortable and you feel safe, your whole body relaxes and your parasympathetic nervous system is able to

get into gear and so it's very, very tangible how you feel versus how you look and it goes back

To education and it goes back to the fact that we're just not taught how our ...

and you would think, you know, we would be born knowing how to eat and how to sleep and how to

function but all of these things are learned and being in a Western society and we're just not

we're not taught. Yeah and we're also we're in an incentive driven society. There's incentives everywhere you look right. The incentive behind providing treatment versus addressing group cause is that there's a monetary gain to be had and we could listen, I could go down the rabbit hole on this and talk about the the pharmaceutical industry at length but like there's a financial incentive there to all right well you have this issue you have this disease and I'm going to treat it with

this medication and we're going to medicate to offset the negative aspects of this disease but we're not going to treat the root cause actually because root causation if I were to treat that then you're

you don't need to come back here again. Yeah it's it's not even that simple though it's the fact

that we go to doctors for answers and there's definitely a place for Western medicine and for those pills and like diabetes and even things like thyroid that it is really good to have that sort of support but when it comes to root cause there's not just one root cause and it might be multiple factors and multiple things and there's multiple there can be multiple some in traditional Chinese medicine they don't think about they think about disease differently it comes out as I want to

say aspects or yeah different ways of manifestation and so these manifestations can like multiple manifestations can equal one certain disease so it's just it's not it's we go to doctors wanting to get answers when they don't have the answers and so they're doing the best that they can with their resources that they can but at the end of the day they're not taught either are they just kind of using and you know my dad's a doctor but he's he's a psychologist and so the way that he

puts it when I when I first got out of high school my first job was as a mechanic so I worked as

mechanic for about four years and the big part of my job was providing diagnostics so I would there be an issue client we bring their car to me and the car would have an issue and I would trace that issue back to wherever is where I get the idea of root cause but I would trace that issue back to like if it was an electrical issue and you know your your check engine light was popping and it was popping a code for an O2 sensor that's rooted back towards your exhaust then I would go check that

O2 sensor and then if the O2 sensor was still good then that would tell me that somewhere between the O2 sensor and the ECU the electronic control unit there's a miscommunication happening here and so now I have to trace my way through that system to find where that miscommunication is happening and it's very similar to how we practice medicine at least here in the west in that you go to the doctor and you tell them your issue and then the doctor might have a slew of questions for you

based on how you're feeling, what you what's your diet like, how much sleep are you getting x, y, and then they're going to use deductive reasoning to try and give you a solution based on what you know

their best evidence is based on their training right? How do we make that system better?

Yeah so the thing is is that a lot of the times the doctors don't have the answers and so they do the best that they can with the resources that they can to help but what I

create space for is that I think that our bodies have the wisdom and our bodies are always talking

to us so something that I teach is I call the language of the body and so just like when you're in a relationship and there's red flags popping up everywhere and you choose not to see the red flags and then the relationship blows up and you're in a state of depression for a year that's not necessarily needed if you're a kid to see those red flags and same with the body the body is always speaking to you it might even show up as heart palpitations shortness of breath, anxiety

It manifests many times it's pain and so when we're able to give the body spa...

to listen to the body then you will start everything that you need is within yourself and so

when we slow down and kind of create the space for people to tap into themselves to be able to

listen to their body for that kind of natural guidance and wisdom. There's not a container for our system for people to be allowed to listen to their body for a long enough period of time to affect the kind of change that they might need like let's say for example you know you're working an office job and it's really hard on your nervous system right and so you don't have the ability or the time working nine to five going home you sleep you don't have that enough time in the week

to disregulate your nervous system and when your nervous system isn't regulated you have trouble

concentrating you have trouble you're not eating correctly because you're eating once a day because you think that's the right thing to do and all of that compounds and then we don't have a container in society to be able to say hey for the people who are experiencing this thing and misregulated nervous system like we have a thing for that you guys you know there should be a system by which you can take a take a sabbatical and we're gonna put you in somewhere like your sanctuary

and this is a place where you can go specifically to regulate your nervous system yeah get into your

body stop slow down breathe for a second and then come back properly you know in your body

right and another thing that I'm very passionate about is learning how to feel our emotions and the concept of numbing and a numbing for your lifestyle so that's another thing that

we're not taught which I think is really important is learning how to feel through hearty motions

a lot of times let's say you work in nine to five and you are overexerted and feeling burnt out it's normal to feel tired all the time it's normal to feel fatigued most people disassociate right they spend eight hours a day in a dissociative state right yeah and actually those feelings those hard feelings that we don't want to feel they are teachers and they are areas of growth and so that's something else that I do within the art of aging is kind of create these containers

where you can be vulnerable about how you're feeling and you can be witnessed in how you're feeling and we can kind of learn to move through these emotions so that we're not suppressing them and actually you know if you are on a healing journey there's you know if you are familiar with you know somatic awareness and the fascia that we hold our experiences within our body and so if you are you know in your 30s and you start to realize that you're holding on to things

and conditioning from your childhood and you have any start your healing journey right and

there's times when you have to feel these emotions that have been suppressed and it's not easy

and so you know it's very easy to numb and that is something else that I kind of do is make space and room for that and also as you're saying stopping, pausing, breathing, coming back, more rejuvenated right it's more of learning safety within the body how to feel safe because that's how the body really thrives through that feeling with safety for everybody that's out there listening and for our audience where can people go if they want to learn more about you?

Well Instagram of course. Not everybody's favorite social media. I am Salah which is S-E-L-A-H underscore integrative underscore medspot. There's a lot of underscores. Yeah. I'm gonna make sure that we have that room now on the screen for you guys. In my website and um I'm located in Charleston South Carolina but also do online containers. Gotcha. Gotcha. So guys if you are still watching at this point and you're wondering you know where can

I go see more of a story how she got to this place make sure that you guys are gonna go check out

Her episode of Women Empower.

be the one editing it but who knows who knows what the future holds but again this is inside success TV. I'm your host Jason Tyler joined by Ava and we will see you guys in the next one.

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