Welcome, bright viewers, 
to this week’s edition of 
Healthy Living, featuring 
Dr. Judith Orloff, 
who will discuss intuition, 
constructive energy 
and spirituality 
and how they can be used 
to achieve physical 
and emotional healing. 
Dr. Orloff is a 
board-certified psychiatrist 
who has been recognized 
by US publication 
Body and Soul Magazine 
as “one of 
our nation's top doctors.” 
As the newspaper 
USA TODAY states, 
“Dr. Orloff voices 
the message 
that intuition works as 
a potent therapeutic force 
that can help us 
lead smarter, saner lives.” 
Dr. Orloff is a member of 
Natural Health Magazine's 
Advisory Board, 
an Assistant Clinical 
Professor of Psychiatry 
at the University 
of California,
Los Angeles, USA 
and a lecturer. 
She is also author of 
the international bestseller, 
“Emotional Freedom,” 
which has been 
made in to
a public television special 
in the United States 
and DVD entitled, 
“Judith Orloff, M.D.: 
Emotional Freedom Now!” 
Her other bestsellers 
include 
“Positive Energy,”
“Dr. Judith Orloff’s Guide
to Intuitive Healing” 
and “Second Sight.” 
Let’s now find out 
how intuition came 
into Dr. Orloff’s life.
The way I got into it was 
that when I was a little girl 
I was raised 
by two physician parents 
and I have 25 physicians 
in my family, 
but I was a little girl 
who had these 
very strong premonitions 
about things. 
I would predict deaths or 
illnesses or earthquakes, 
something like that, 
and it scared my parents 
so much
so that they forbade me 
to ever mention 
my intuitions at home. 
And so my healing path 
and my development 
has been how to 
integrate intuition
into my life as a woman, 
and also in my
psychiatric practice, 
so that I can use it 
in my daily life 
and also teach 
my patients and readers 
how to use it too. 
When I treat patients, 
and in my books, 
I talk about 
how to integrate intuition 
into health and healing.
“Emotional Freedom,” 
published in March 2009, 
encourages readers 
to overcome 
negative emotions 
by reacting to them 
constructively. 
Here’s Dr. Orloff 
with more on her book.
“Emotional Freedom” 
is about how to become 
non-reactive to emotions, 
so you’re not just reacting 
when your buttons 
get pushed. 
It’s about using
emotions as a path 
to spiritual awakening, 
to be able to 
tune into your intuition 
and find out 
the deeper meaning 
of whatever emotion 
you go through. 
It can be anger, 
it can be frustration, 
it could be any emotion, 
but there’s a spiritual 
meaning to every emotion 
that you go through, 
and you can use intuition 
to tune in, 
to find out what that is. 
Fear is a huge emotion 
that saps people 
of their power. 
Part of emotional freedom
is just to make
a commitment to the best 
of your ability not to lead 
a fear-driven life. 
And so I have my patients 
list their top five fears, 
whatever they are, 
so they’re 
very clear about it. 
And then really 
outline ways you could 
find courage 
to transform those fears. 
And one area where 
that comes up 
is in relationships. 
And I speak about in 
“Emotional Freedom,” 
the emotional vampires 
who can drain 
your energy.
And I bring this up 
because this is the 
spiritual challenge too, 
and it’s an intuitive 
challenge to be able
to pinpoint the people 
in your life 
who are draining, 
or who are positive. 
And with the draining 
ones to take steps to set 
limits and boundaries 
with them and 
work with yourself. 
What spiritual work, 
what intuitive work 
do you have to do 
on yourself when you’re 
around these people? 
And I go through 
different types of 
emotional vampires, 
the one being the narcissist. 
Narcissist is the 
“me, me, me person,” 
and they’re only really 
happy about you if 
you go along their plan. 
What life lessons
can we learn if we go 
through a depression? 
Dr. Orloff provides 
her thoughts.
A beautiful example 
of what you can gain 
from depression 
is deep empathy for others 
and compassion 
for yourself. 
Because when you 
go through something 
as strenuous as depression, 
people tend to 
beat themselves up a lot. 
But part of 
the lesson of depression 
is learning self-compassion. 
And when you can be 
compassionate 
and loving with yourself 
and moment by moment, 
try and listen intuitively 
to what's good for you 
in the depression, and 
what can be most loving 
and kind to yourself 
and being around 
loving and kind people 
as you are going through 
your healing process, 
that in itself 
is a tremendous lesson.
And depression 
is also a good way 
to beat down the ego. 
And it’s very painful, 
but depression 
can teach you humility, 
and it can teach you 
how to be humble 
and not arrogant, 
and not think 
you could do it all, or 
know everything to know. 
As a psychiatrist, it’s 
a very essential process, 
to really gain that humility 
in your life. 
So you can gain that 
from depression, 
gain humility, 
deep compassion 
for yourself and others. 
After this brief message, 
we’ll learn more about 
Dr. Orloff and her work 
as a psychiatrist. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
It’s very important 
that a doctor learns 
how to tune into the soul 
of another person, 
of the patient. 
Because when you just 
go into a doctor 
and they just give you 
the lab results 
and then you’re out, 
it’s like nothing happens 
there’s no healing 
that happens. 
You’re given maybe
a direction but there’s 
no deep soul healing. 
Welcome back to 
Healthy Living here on 
Supreme Master 
Television. 
Dr. Judith Orloff is 
an Assistant Clinical 
Professor of Psychiatry 
at the University 
of California, Los Angeles 
and author of the 
international bestseller 
“Emotional Freedom,” 
as well as 
“Positive Energy,” 
“Dr. Judith Orloff’s Guide 
to Intuitive Healing” 
and “Second Sight.”
If you happen to go 
through a depression, 
I hope everyone can look 
at it from the standpoint 
of emotional freedom, 
in terms of 
“What spiritual growth
I can gain?” 
Rather than, 
“This is just tormenting me, 
I want it to be over.” 
You see, 
that’s the linear mind. 
With emotional freedom 
there are two ways 
of looking at things, 
one is the linear mind. 
The linear mind never 
wants to experience 
any pain; 
it just wants it to be over. 
But the intuitive mind 
knows that there is 
a deeper meaning 
to this pain and suffering, 
and to be able to use it 
to transform the pain 
and suffering into 
something more positive. 
And it's about learning 
how to work with pain 
without letting it totally 
consume you. 
To see it 
as the spiritual teacher, 
whether it's physical 
pain, emotional pain, 
psychic pain, 
whatever it is, 
to use it as a vehicle for 
transformation. You see, 
it's how you look at it.
Besides being a psychiatrist 
who treats patients 
using conventional 
Western medicine, 
Dr. Orloff also incorporates 
her deep knowledge 
of intuition, energy, 
and spirituality 
to help her patients 
resolve issues. 
Basically 
what happens is that 
a patient will come in, 
and I will listen 
with my traditional 
medical knowledge about 
what they’re saying. 
Let’s say they have 
a relationship problem 
or stress at work 
or they’re depressed, 
or they’re anxious, 
and I’ll listen to 
what they’re saying, 
but I’ll also 
tune into my intuition, 
and I’ll be open to 
any images or impressions 
or flashes of insight or 
senses of energy that I get 
in addition to compliment 
my traditional 
medical knowledge. 
And so I combine 
all of that information 
to help patients. 
Dr. Orloff shares 
with her patients how 
they too can get in touch 
with their intuitive side 
thus enabling them 
to enhance their 
emotional well-being and 
better face life’s challenges.
I absolutely teach 
every patient 
who comes to me how 
to tap into their intuition 
to be healed. 
Because I believe 
that tapping into 
that inner wisdom, 
that still small voice inside, 
will tell us the truth 
about things. 
And my patients 
will inevitably, hopefully, 
leave therapy 
and they’ll need to have 
these empowering skills 
of how to listen to 
what’s inside, 
that precious inner voice 
that I see 
as being connected 
to the greater sense 
of spirituality. 
That spirit talks through 
that intuitive voice. 
And once you can get quiet 
and get beyond 
the chatter of the mind 
to go in and tune into 
something deeper, 
then that really gives you 
access to something 
powerful inside, and 
when my patients learn 
how to do this, 
when they learn 
how to tune into 
their gut feelings, 
when they learn 
how to tune into know 
whatever forms of 
information comes through, 
whether it’s visual 
or auditory, 
they can use this in 
whatever stressful situation 
they have in their life 
so that it’s empowered 
from within. 
Not only is Dr. Orloff 
transforming the lives of 
her patients and readers, 
she is also helping 
medical professionals 
understand the benefits 
of using intuition 
in their practice. 
And what I am 
trying to do with 
emotional freedom
and intuition 
is to teach psychiatrists 
and therapists 
how to tune in 
and be with the person 
and prescribe things 
other than medication.
Meditation itself 
can cause the endorphins 
to flow in the body, 
which are the body's 
natural pain killers, 
and through even 
a three-minute meditation, 
you can shift out of 
the stress cycle of cortisol, 
the stress hormone 
surging through your body 
and causing anxiety, 
to calm endorphins, 
to relaxation response, 
natural pain-killers 
which are opiate-like. 
They are 
very blissful hormones 
that you can get 
going in your body through 
a meditation practice, 
or through exercising. 
I have spoken at 
the American Psychiatric 
Association meetings 
about intuition, so they’re 
beginning to open up, 
and I think 
the holistic practitioners 
are definitely open. 
We thank 
Dr. Judith Orloff 
for sharing her wealth 
of knowledge on intuition 
and finding 
emotional balance in life. 
May Heaven bless her 
and her work that is 
bringing peace and joy back 
into many people’s lives. 
For more details 
on Dr. Orloff, 
please visit: 
www.DrJudithOrloff.com
Books by Dr. Orloff 
are available 
at the same website
Please join us 
next Monday 
for the second and 
final part of our interview 
with Dr. Orloff 
on Healthy Living. 
Esteemed viewers, 
thank you for joining us 
today on our program. 
Coming up next is 
Science and Spirituality, 
after Noteworthy News. 
May tranquility and calm 
always reside 
within all of us.
The soul may incarnate 
in one of myriad forms, 
including that 
of an animal.
The day I met you first
Was the day of my birth
Pink and round, 
me oh so plump
With Mom I gaily frolicked.
Yet humans may not 
realize that animals 
also have deep feelings 
and noble characteristics.
Though my look 
is different than yours,
though you can’t 
understand my speech,
though I don’t 
have pretty clothes 
to cover a wicked heart
nor do I know 
how to make money
and devise inhumane 
schemes,
please give me your love
and let me live out 
my entire life 
in this borrowed form.
Please tune in 
to Supreme Master 
Television 
for the conclusion of  
the world premiere
of the Aulacese modern 
folk opera 
“A Tale of Karma 
(Retribution),”
specially adapted from 
“Words of A Piglet,” 
a profoundly touching 
and extraordinary poem 
written by 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
in her late 20s, 
here on 
Enlightening Entertainment, 
Thursday, July 1. 
Welcome, inspired viewers, 
to this week’s edition of 
Healthy Living, 
once again featuring 
Dr. Judith Orloff, who
advocates using intuition, 
constructive energy 
and spirituality 
to achieve physical 
and emotional healing. 
Dr. Orloff is a 
board-certified psychiatrist 
who has been recognized 
by US publication 
Body and Soul Magazine 
as “one of 
our nation's top doctors.” 
As the newspaper 
USA TODAY states, 
“Dr. Orloff voices 
the message 
that intuition works as 
a potent therapeutic force 
that can help us 
lead smarter, saner lives.” 
Dr. Orloff is a member of 
Natural Health Magazine's 
Advisory Board, 
an Assistant Clinical 
Professor of Psychiatry 
at the University 
of California,
Los Angeles, USA and
an international lecturer. 
She is also author of 
the international bestseller, 
“Emotional Freedom,” 
which has been 
made in to
a public television special 
in the United States 
and DVD entitled, 
“Judith Orloff, M.D.: 
Emotional Freedom Now!” 
Her other bestsellers 
include 
“Positive Energy,”
“Dr. Judith Orloff’s Guide
to Intuitive Healing” 
and “Second Sight.” 
Intuition is about 
being receptive.
But just know the basic 
difference between 
thinking and intuition. 
Thinking is 
A plus B equals C. 
Thinking is analyzing.
Intuition is tuning in 
and receiving – 
big difference. 
And intuition comes 
through in transmissions; 
it goes fast, very fast. 
So you have to catch it. 
So many people 
miss intuitions because 
they’re thinking, and 
they come in very fast 
and it’s as if you don’t 
even remember it. 
You get the information 
that comes in, but 
it’s so fast, like a flash, 
in and out, you forget it 
or you dismiss it or 
you say something like, 
“This is so weird, 
this doesn’t make sense.” 
That kind of thing. 
“This is so weird,” 
is a statement 
that the mind makes 
all the time about intuition. 
And I want you 
to be prepared for this, 
because when you’re 
making decisions, 
and you’re taking a risk 
and you’re 
listening to something 
other than the mind, 
you’re listening to 
your intuition, 
the mind will have 
a commentary on it.
We live in 
an over-technologized 
culture. 
Everybody is thinking, 
scheming, and 
trying to figure things out. 
And in Western culture, 
we’re not given 
the kind of support, and 
the kind of enthusiasm 
to develop the still, 
small voice inside, 
to take time and say, 
“Don’t think so much.” 
Dr. Orloff has 
several strategies 
to quiet an active mind 
and hear the inner voice 
of intuition. 
One method involves 
making changes to one’s 
life on a physical level.
I am big believer 
in physical exercise 
to really move the body 
because a lot of people 
just sit all the time. 
They sit at the desk 
at work, they sit, 
and mental health 
and emotional health 
are so dependent 
on the body moving 
and dancing or running 
or walking, or some kind 
of Tai Chi, or Qigong 
or something like that 
to get the body's energies 
moving. 
Because if somebody just 
sits day after day after day, 
it can't be good 
for the body, it can't. 
It has to have 
some kind of movement.
Another approach that 
Dr. Orloff recommends 
to bring forth 
one’s intuition 
involves looking within 
and practicing 
inner contemplation. 
One of the techniques 
that I talk about 
in “Emotional Freedom” 
is the three minute 
meditation, 
which is learning 
how to follow the breath 
to get very quiet inside, 
so that they learn 
how to go into 
their still place inside 
and then listen, 
and maybe focus on 
a positive image or
focus on something very
spiritual that moves them.
And in those three minutes 
to just stay calm, focused, 
and then tune into 
their intuition, 
because the intuition 
comes from that still space. 
And everyone who wants 
to learn emotional freedom 
or tune into their intuition 
has to be able to find 
that still space inside. 
So with each patient 
and all my readers 
I really emphasize 
that my spiritual practice 
is meditation. 
Dr. Orloff believes that 
overanalyzing an issue 
can lead to one’s intuition 
being blocked, thus 
making a choice between 
different alternatives 
a steeper challenge. 
To overcome this obstacle, 
she has another technique 
to make it easier to access 
the tool of intuition.
There was a recent article 
in Science Magazine 
that said it is better 
to sleep on big decisions 
than make them right away. 
This is a huge leap 
for a very conventional 
journal to make. 
When they were evaluating 
how decisions were made, 
they found with subjects 
that if somebody slept 
on a decision 
if you have a big decision 
to make, let’s say about
a move or about a job,
if you sleep on it, 
the result of your decision 
will be better than 
if you just 
keep thinking about it. 
And the result of 
the Science (Magazine) 
article was that 
over-thinking can stop 
good decision making. 
This is big. 
This is something 
you really need to know. 
When you’re stuck 
in a problem 
and you don’t know 
how to get out of it, 
what you need to do 
is balance the thought 
with the intuition. 
I’ve known this 
since I’ve been a little girl. 
I sleep on decisions, 
I dream about decisions 
and then that helps me 
make them. 
But however in traditional 
western culture, 
this is not a given. 
And the Science 
(Magazine) article 
was a major step ahead 
in getting through 
to the scientific community 
that maybe thinking isn’t 
the only answer.
After this brief pause 
we’ll hear more 
from Dr. Judith Orloff 
about tapping 
into one’s intuition. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back to 
Healthy Living, here on 
Supreme Master 
Television, featuring
Dr. Judith Orloff 
who is an Assistant 
Clinical Professor 
of Psychiatry 
at the University of 
California, Los Angeles, 
an international lecturer, 
and a best-selling author. 
Dr. Orloff has recently 
released a revised edition 
of her book, 
“Second Sight: 
An Intuitive Psychiatrist 
Tells Her Extraordinary 
Story and Shows You 
How To Tap 
Your Own Inner Wisdom” 
and kindly shared with us 
some details 
about the work.
Tell us a little bit more 
about the book and 
what is the book about? 
How is it different from 
that “Emotional Freedom”? 
“Second Sight”
is part memoir and it's
part “how to” in terms of 
developing intuition. 
So “Second Sight” 
is my journey 
about how I came into 
my intuitive voice. 
And then the second part 
of the book is 
how to develop intuition, 
such as how to remember 
your dreams and 
interpret your dreams, 
and how to look into 
the dream world 
for guidance and intuition, 
which is 
a very powerful way 
that I tune into intuitions 
through my dreams 
every morning. 
The first thing I do is 
remember my dreams 
and interpret them 
before I start the day. 
We asked Dr. Orloff 
to give an example 
from her own life 
of drawing upon a dream 
for help when she was 
facing a challenge.
For instance 
when I was writing 
“Emotional Freedom” 
I was writing the chapter 
on frustration, and 
when I wrote the chapter 
I intentionally 
invited frustration in 
so I could learn from it 
to develop patience. 
That’s part of how I write it, 
it’s very experiential. 
But when I was writing 
that chapter 
I developed writer’s block 
as part of the frustration. 
And I kept pushing, 
and pushing and 
nothing would come out, 
and I couldn’t get in touch 
with my creativity 
and my ideas, and 
I kept forcing and forcing, 
everything was wrong. 
And then I had a dream 
with a phone number, 
and then I called it 
the next day, 
and it was funny because 
a man answered the phone 
and he said, “UCLA 
(University of California, 
Los Angeles) 
labor and delivery room.” 
I was pushing so hard 
and I got 
the exact right place. 
So it made me laugh and 
it made me lighten up, 
cosmic humor. 
And so 
it was the synchronicity; 
I was on the right track 
but just lighten up 
a little bit. 
So that phone number 
and that experience 
helped me to lighten up 
via the dream.
Dreams are a powerful 
vehicle for intuition that 
we can tap into every night. 
And every one 
can be taught 
how to do this; 
I have a technique 
where I teach people 
to have a dream journal. 
Keep a pen 
by the dream journal, 
and then ask a question 
before you go to sleep 
at night. 
And it could be, 
“How can I have 
better health?” 
Something like that. 
And then you go to sleep, 
wake up and 
in the morning, 
the first five minutes, 
you stay quiet, 
in a hypnagogic state 
between sleep and waking, 
and remember the dreams, 
write it down and then 
see how the dream 
answered your question.
Decision-making 
on a significant matter 
can be daunting at times 
and cause stress 
and anxiety in our lives. 
Here’s a tip 
from Dr. Orloff on how 
to make better choices 
by using intuition.
Now, to make intuitive 
decisions about anything, 
there are a number of steps 
to go through. 
Step one is 
develop your belief system. 
Step two is listen to 
your body or your gut. 
Step three is 
learn to tune in. 
Step four is 
notice your energy level, 
and step  five is 
listen to your dreams. 
These are five ways 
that you can apply to 
intuitive decision making, 
and with any decision 
that you’re about to make, 
you can apply all these. 
And if one doesn’t work, 
you go to the next. 
So, I use all of these 
in consort
as a psychiatrist; 
with patients 
I’m constantly using 
these intuitive techniques 
as I’m listening to 
somebody, intuitively. 
It’s very important 
to listen intuitively. 
To close, 
here are some thoughts 
from Dr. Orloff 
about the future integration 
of intuition into the field 
of Western medicine. 
I have hope that 
eventually intuition will 
just be part of medicine. 
And it’s about combining 
traditional medicine 
and intuition, it’s not 
using one or the other, 
it’s knowing when to use 
either or both. 
And so it is just 
accumulating wisdom 
from any source. 
I listen to people 
in my life. 
When I wake up 
and I go out of my door 
every day, 
I listen to the wisdom 
that comes to me 
from every source. 
I don’t have a bias, 
I just listen. 
I am very grateful; 
whatever is given to me 
I’ll receive. 
And I think that’s the same 
that can help patients, 
just being open 
to all wisdom sources 
as a physician, 
and incorporating that 
to help others, 
that’s my philosophy.
Thank you 
Dr. Judith Orloff 
for assisting others 
to achieve better health, 
both physically and 
mentally, higher spirits 
and enhanced well-being 
through your work. 
We wish you the very best 
in your efforts 
to bring intuition 
into the practice 
of Western medicine 
and all your 
other future endeavors.
For more details 
on Dr. Orloff, 
please visit: 
www.DrJudithOrloff.com
Books by Dr. Orloff 
are available 
at the same website
Astute viewers, 
we’ve enjoyed 
your company 
on this week’s edition of 
Healthy Living. 
Up next is 
Science and Spirituality, 
after Noteworthy News.  
May we all enjoy 
everlasting inner peace 
and contentment.