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Shankar Poncelet
shankarponcelet@primal.net
npub1pwwy...qn5a
⚡️ Crypto Investor | 🌀 Energy Healer | 🎯 Growth Strategist
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
She carried shoulder pain for months. In minutes, it was gone. 🗝️ The nervous system holds the key — ready to see what’s possible for you? DM me.
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
Sometimes change arrives quietly — in a single movement, a single breath. Maria came to us with upper-back and shoulder tension that had been limiting her for almost a year. Even the simplest stretches felt impossible. After one focused session with us, she felt something shift deeply. In her own words: ❤️ “I feel lighter — my back pain is relieved and it was an interesting experience.” For us, these moments are humbling reminders of the body’s natural intelligence. When we gently reset the nervous system — blending functional neurology, applied kinesiology, and subtle manual work — the body often remembers how to heal itself with surprising speed. Antrea and I are grateful for Maria’s trust. Her story is not just about relief from pain, but about reclaiming ease, freedom, and possibility. If you’ve been living with tension, chronic pain, or menstrual-related struggles, send us a direct message. We’d love to share how root-cause healing can open new doors for you. 🌿 We continue traveling the world offering sessions, so perhaps soon we’ll be in your city — ready to bring this work to you.
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
Your brain can rewire itself. Here’s how neuroplasticity changes everything. 👉 Follow for more insights into functional neurology!
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
Met a doctor at a business mastermind in Bali. @Antréa Ferguson asked if he could help. He did. Instantly. We flew to the UK to learn it. Now we treat people worldwide.
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
Last night in #Amsterdam we sat with Robin and listened to a life that reads like both a confession and a history lesson. We first met him after offering some healing — and what started as a simple encounter turned into an invitation we’ll never forget. Over dinner, Robin walked us through decades of reinvention, conviction, and compromise: a life lived in the trenches of politics, identity, and personal transformation. He traced his path from youthful idealism — fighting for justice and imagining a world remade — to a harder, stranger wisdom: stop waiting for revolution in the streets, start changing the institutions that shape thought. Gramsci’s “long march” wasn’t theory for him; it was lived reality. He’d seen activists capture classrooms, journalists shape narratives, and judges bend the lines of what becomes “normal.” Hearing that strategy explained by someone who’s watched it work — and fail — was sobering. He spoke with blunt clarity about revolutions that devoured themselves. Movements promising equality that ended in secret bank accounts and privileges for the few. The irony that freer markets sometimes delivered more real gains — factories, cars, wages, breathing space — than utopian manifestos ever did. And then there was the deeply personal. Robin spoke of his transgender years not as spectacle but as lived truth. He shared painful experiments in belonging, desire, and identity; times when ideology softened him, and times when it hardened him. He told of loving people who hated what he worked to dismantle, betraying organizations that trusted him, and carrying both scars and gifts from those choices. Yet through all the strategy and scars, there was tenderness. The small, stubborn acts of care. The kindness that shows up in the middle of a fiasco. The way he risked so much not for power, but to shield someone he loved when bigger plans fell apart. If it sounds messy, that’s because it is. Robin’s life is a study in the grey: brilliant strategy and ugly compromise, fierce tenderness and ruthless pragmatism, experiments in identity that left both wounds and wisdom. Listening to him was like being handed a map — honest, incomplete, uncomfortable, and necessary. Thank you, Robin, for the stories, the warnings, and the hope. We feel incredibly lucky to have shared that table with you. If anyone wants to hear more, come with an open mind and a strong cup of tea — Robin has plenty more to tell. — Shankar & @Antréa Ferguson image
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
Last week in Amsterdam, @Antréa Ferguson and I held a quiet little pop-up session. A young woman came to us carrying the weight of chronic shoulder and upper-back tension — the kind that builds from long shifts and endless hours of sitting. After a functional-neurology assessment and just a few precise corrections, her expression softened. More than that, she felt lighter, freer, more at ease in her own body. This approach — a blend of kinesiology-style muscle testing and neuroscience-based corrections we first learned from a UK clinician working with elite athletes — often brings immediate relief. Yet the deeper magic lies in how it reawakens the body’s memory of balance. With posture awareness, small mobility practices, and occasional reinforcement, these shifts can ripple forward into daily life. If you or someone close to you is carrying chronic tension in the shoulders, neck, or back, send us a direct message. Antrea and I are here in Amsterdam until the end of September, and we’d love to support your healing — whether on or off camera. And if you’re elsewhere, take heart: we’re traveling the world, and perhaps soon, we’ll be near you.
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
📱 The moment we finished, he eagerly asked for our number. He came with hernia pain at 9/10… and left smiling: “I am free, free person… I can walk.” Moments like this remind me and @Antréa Ferguson why we travel the world sharing this work. 🌍✨ DM us if you’re ready for your own shift.
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
Sometimes the body carries an old story longer than we expect. Albert introduced himself and shared that he had been living with shoulder pain for two or three years after a fall. The discomfort seemed to ripple through his whole body — from his back to his feet — leaving him unsure where the real source of pain lived. What he did know was simple: “a lot of pain” and difficulty moving with ease. With only a few minutes together, I guided him through a short process: light muscle testing, subtle touches, and the resonance of a tuning fork. Small steps, done gently. Almost immediately, Albert paused and said, “Yeah… it feels something. It feels a little bit different. In a good way.” When I asked if he could describe it further, he smiled, searching for words: “I feel… I don’t know how to say… just something different in the good way.” That small shift — from burden to possibility — is the beginning of every deeper healing journey. Both Antrea and I carry these same skills, meeting people where they are, whether it’s five minutes or a full session. Each encounter shows how even brief moments can open new doors. We continue to travel the world, sharing this work and connecting with those ready for change. If Albert’s story resonates with you, send us a message. Perhaps soon, we’ll be in your city, and you’ll discover what “something different in the good way” feels like for yourself.
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
A Lesson in Power Over Pain Louis walked 10–15 kilometers a day. His body began to betray him — hip and shoulder pain rising with each movement. Most people accept this as the slow tax of time. But here is the truth: pain is not inevitable. It is a signal — and signals can be rewired. With a few targeted tests, pressure points, and nervous-system cues, the pattern shifted. The pain dissolved. His words: “Yeah, it’s gone… yay.” Power lies in understanding the hidden levers of the body — pull them, and change is immediate. 👉 Want to see what levers can be pulled in your own system? DM me for a session.
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
Last week at a pub in Amsterdam, @Antréa Ferguson met Richard. A quick chat turned into a 10-minute functional-neurology reset — just a few stimulus tests and a short adjustment. The shift was immediate. As Richard put it: 'During the process I was getting very relaxed…I was able to kind of hold pressure in ways that I wasn't able to before.' And the next day, he messaged: 'Feeling good! No shoulder discomfort at all and was doing great last night.' No machines. No long appointments. Just a nervous-system-first approach that often shows results in minutes. We filmed a short clip of the session. If you’re curious, let me know and I’ll send it over.
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
Amsterdam and its peculiar findings. I came across this in a local shop today: Blue Lotus — once used by Egyptians and Mayans for its calming and psychoactive effects. The man behind the counter told me something that stuck. He said: “In the past, I told everyone they should try psychedelics. Now I say: it’s not for everyone. If you have even the slightest doubt, stay away from it.” I admitted I was too chicken to even try it. And instead of judging, he smiled and said he favored reluctance. That hit me. In a culture that constantly glorifies “pushing limits” and “never saying no,” it was refreshing to hear the opposite: that knowing your boundaries can be a sign of strength. Maybe sometimes the bravest choice isn’t to dive headfirst into every experience… but to recognize when it’s simply not for you. What do you think — is true courage found in trying everything, or in knowing when to step back? image
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
The Blood Moon from Amsterdam! The Earth’s shadow swallows the Moon, and the only light reaching it has passed through every sunset and sunrise happening on Earth at that exact moment. You’re literally watching the Moon illuminated by the glow of the world’s horizons. image
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
Healing isn’t about chasing symptoms — it’s about dismantling the invisible traps that create them. A few weeks ago, this woman came in with pain so specific it felt like the body was taunting her: a burning nerve in her elbow that flared every time she leaned on it or held her phone. She thought the story was her elbow. It wasn’t. The real culprits were hidden — old surgeries, dental work, scar tissue, and subtle interferences scattered across her system. Once uncovered, everything shifted. The burning vanished in session. Muscles that had been “off” for years switched back on. Her breath cleared. Strength returned. Two weeks later, she sends this message: “I think I’m gonna have to refer y’all out to all my people!! I still feel AMAZING!” 💖 The lesson? The body never lies — but it misdirects. Pain is the mask; the source is always elsewhere. If you learn to look past the distraction, you can change everything. image
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shankarponcelet 3 months ago
Bitcoin’s price is down—but here’s why I’m NOT selling.