Live reviews feed
Close

REVIEWS

4.8 Over 64 Reviews
google
I have struggled for many years with my belly, and the GP's haven't really given much help with it. I have been looking into alternative options & came across Michelle & the clinic and decided to take the plunge.

I visited on the Saturday for my consultation & Michelle instantly put me at ease and explained the process thoroughly.

I was then booked in the next day for my 1st treatment session, I am sure Michelle could sense my fear but she didn't show it - she talked me through everything again and made sure to take me through the process step by step.

I felt instant relief, and the pain I had been in has disappeared, I have just finished my first day pain free and I am so thankful to Michelle for all her help - I will most definitely be making this part of my normal routine.
google
What can you say to give you a true reflection of how fantastic this experience has been. Day one feels so long ago but to be feeling so much healthier is all credit to Michelle. What resembled hard boiled sweets to now a sorbet like movement is epic. There is nothing quite like a good shizzle! Michelle is amazing, passionate and caring. I can’t thank her enough. Better out than in! If you’re in any doubt just have a chat - you’ll get sound advice and some good craick. Pardon the pun!
google
I've been attending since July 24 and have found the treatment a life changer. From someone that was on laxatives for 7 years to not having any at all is an absolute achievement and a huge health benefit. Not only has my gut health improved my general overall health has seen a huge difference including my physical and emotional well being. I am so much more calmer and relaxed now . I feel amazing as the weight and inches have droppe off my stomach. You don't realise how all our body functions are inter related but they are and Michelle explains it so well!. The gut analysis test was a game changer for me to have actually identified the root cause of my bowel issues which my GP's failed to diagnose and treat for 24 years! Michelle is a gem! Always there in person and at the end off the phone for advise and guidance. She gives you that one to one time and really listens to you. I just wish I had found EternalBeing being years ago and known of Elvis the Pelvis!! Which is really fun and works!! Only those who attend EternalBeing know what that is!!! My advise... give it a go you have nothing but the nasty internal stuff to lose and a lot lot lot more to gain!
google
Michelle you truly are amazing!! You have helped me so much! Every appointment makes me feel so much better & can't recommend enough!🤍
google
If you haven't payed a vist yet to the fabulous Michelle then do so now 🥰
After suffering menopause symptoms for way to long
Tired moody irregular periods emotions all over the place but the big one one for me my anxiety was something else had a conversation with Michelle who suggested the meno patch
When I say this has changed everything almost instantly
I'm focused I have more energy zero anxiety I'm so calm and for the 1st time in over a year I have had a what I call a normal period and I welcomed it that feeling of normality
Those around me have noticed the difference but more importantly I have felt it
I have been taking them for 4 wks it's my little patch of heaven
Thankyou Michelle 😍
google
I’ve been seeing Michelle now for 3 months and it’s made such a positive difference. Knowing how bloated and reactive I am to different types of foods and being educated into which actual foods make me react the way they do has been a game changer. I’ve lost 6 kilos predominately from smarter eating and regularly seeing Michelle. I feel better and more energetic day to day and would recommend Eternal being to anyone.
google
Colonic cleanse.. a treatment you never knew you needed until you get it done!

I love seeing Michelle, her energy, conversations, helpful advice and great banter makes it even more worthwhile! She makes you feel utterly comfortable! (Thank you Michelle and thank you Steve for your friendly admin every time I called)

I’ve had 3 sessions and can’t wait to go back for more! I would say you need a minimum of at least 3 sessions to be surprised by your body!!

Keep doing what you do! You love it, we love it.. it’s a win win 🫶🏽
google
My experience and journey with Michelle has been amazing highly recommend.
google
Came For My First Treatment Today And Was Really Impressed Felt Really Cared For
The Treatment Was Painless
And Michelle Was Wonderful
Felt So Much Relief
google
Well, I have always suffered with irregular bowel movements putting down to my hypothyroidism. Then a few years back became a chronic migraine sufferer - daily preventative meds for the past few years which is 3 tablets every day. Side effect of these is constipation so on top of everything I was already dealing with was not a good mix.

I had heard about colonics and was interested in the process so I went ahead and booked a consultation knowing I wanted to go ahead with the treatment. After my second treatment my monthly cycle was due and low and behold my migraines didn’t appear. So for the first time in however many years I’ve had a pain free cycle which meant a week less of strong pain relief. Woo hoo!

Couldn’t be happier with my colonic journey.

Thank you for being so welcoming. The wealth of knowledge Michelle has is incredible. Don’t suffer in silence and get yourself sorted.
google
My back feels brand new again! Michelle is amazing, friendly and welcoming, I will be going back for more treatments!
google
best service there is ,lovely women,results are amazing from getting lemon bottle after only first session
google
Great service! Michelle was so welcoming and friendly and is passionate about making people feel their best! Will be recommending and revisiting 😊
google
Michelle, you are truly amazing!
Every time I visited I leave with new information and knowledge and I’m grateful for your wealth of knowledge.
You are beautiful in and out and your expertise and professionalism is impressive.
A true inspiration!
Thank you for all your help and ongoing help. You’ve helped me in ways I can’t even help myself (haha)
Highly recommended and an investment into your health and wellbeing.
google
I was told by a private gastroenterologist I had a dropped large intestine and will be on laxatives for the rest of my life (now 36) they were making me fee horrible and not getting rid of the full compacted problem. I spoke to Michelle and she put everything into perspective and assured me that she can help. I had my first appointment last night and wow it was fantastic, I was extremely nervous but Michelle calmed me down. I can honestly say she has changed my life already, I don’t feel bloated, tired, grumpy or in any pain and that is the first appointment. Chucked the laxatives away and believe Michelle can train my bowels to behave and act normal. I cannot recommend Michelle enough. Thank you so much. 😊
google
Was in a bad way and was feeling really bad. I contacted Eternal Being and talked through my problems with Michelle, and made an appointment. I got immediate relief and over a few sessions got back to normal from really bad inflammation. Michelle was brilliant and gave me great advice and treatment. I would highly recommend getting a consultation if you have any issues. Thanks Michelle. Richard 👍🙂
google
Michelle is so tuned in to your body and knows what it needs. I have regular colonic treatments and feel fantastic. After having major ankle surgery late November 2023, I had a lymphatic massage to help my body recover. AMAZING!!! Thank you so much Michelle
google
Where do I start to tell you my journey with Michelle at Eternalbeing. TBH I hadn't heard of EB it only came about when I was talking to a gym buddy and we started talking about feeling bloaty, irregular bowel movement. So I thought as I have had problems since being a young girl around the age of 5 when I really struggled to go to the toilet so I was injected in the bottom to help me. So when I looked into the services that EB do I was so excited to think there was someone out there who may be able to help me. I made the call I was very nervous but after a telephone conversation which lasted about half an hour I booked in with her. Well, what an experience that was. Never thought in a million years my issues, fears quickly went away. My first clonic liver cleanse was a little bit surreal. How can I just be so relaxed and able to pooh after a few reassuring words from Michelle. We laugh all the time she still says after 10 years LOOK at your pooh train. I will be honest I did suffer from a headache afterwards but Michelle did warn me this would happen but soon subsided. Lots of water and not too much food after the treatment. I was taken suppliments to help me with my daily routine. Vitamin D3,
Bifido and Fibre,live cultures supplement for women, zinc citrate,
Alway I use her own patches
BIO MAGNETIC this to help my joints as I work out everyday
Sleep patch as I was struggling but ATM I'm sleeping very well.
Now about. Michelle my pooh fairy. This women is so passionate about her work to help others, always around of you need advise. She's my hero and best of all Michelle listens to you. Never rushes you, if these are going to plan with your treatment she ensures we rest and then try again.
Honestly, if you're not too sure about having a treatment I can assure you you would not be disappointed. I love her my pooh fairy
google
After years of stomach bloating, cramps and pain. Taking medication to relive the symptoms.
I visited Michelle for the first time in January. I have not looked back since. I have not had to take any medication since.
I really felt listened to and I am so pleased I picked the phone up and made that call.
I have more energy and my overall health has improved so much 😊
google
Great Treatment Michell. Thanks.

Of Bugs and Brains: Gut Bacteria Affect Multiple Sclerosis

5th May 2016

ScienceDaily (July 20, 2010) — Biologists at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have demonstrated a connection between multiple sclerosis (MS) — an autoimmune disorder that affects the brain and spinal cord — and gut bacteria.

The work — led by Sarkis K. Mazmanian, an assistant professor of biology at Caltech, and postdoctoral scholar Yun Kyung Lee — appears online the week of July 19-23 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Multiple sclerosis results from the progressive deterioration of the protective fatty myelin sheath surrounding nerve cells. The loss of myelin hinders nerve cells from communicating with one another, leading to a host of neurological symptoms including loss of sensation, muscle spasms and weakness, fatigue, and pain. Multiple sclerosis is estimated to affect about half a million people in the United States alone, with rates of diagnosis rapidly increasing. There is currently no cure for MS.

Although the cause of MS is unknown, microorganisms seem to play some sort of role. “In the literature from clinical studies, there are papers showing that microbes affect MS,” Mazmanian says. “For example, the disease gets worse after viral infections, and bacterial infections cause an increase in MS symptoms.”

On the other hand, he concedes, “it seems counterintuitive that a microbe would be involved in a disease of the central nervous system, because these are sterile tissues.”

And yet, as Mazmanian found when he began examining the multiple sclerosis literature, the suggestion of a link between bacteria and the disease is more than anecdotal. Notably, back in 1993, Caltech biochemist Leroy Hood — who was then at the University of Washington — published a paper describing a genetically engineered strain of mouse that developed a lab-induced form of multiple sclerosis known as experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, or EAE.

When Hood’s animals were housed at Caltech, they developed the disease. But, oddly, when the mice were shipped to a cleaner biotech facility — where their resident gut bacterial populations were reduced — they didn’t get sick. The question was, why? At the time, Mazmanian says, “the authors speculated that some environmental component was modulating MS in these animals.” Just what that environmental component was, however, remained a mystery for almost two decades.

But Mazmanian — whose laboratory examines the relationships between gut microbes, both harmful and helpful, and the immune systems of their mammalian hosts — had a hunch that intestinal bacteria were the key. “As we gained an appreciation for how profoundly the gut microbiota can affect the immune system, we decided to ask if symbiotic bacteria are the missing variable in these mice with MS,” he says.

To find out, Mazmanian and his colleagues tried to induce MS in animals that were completely devoid of the microbes that normally inhabit the digestive system. “Lo and behold, these sterile animals did not get sick,” he says.

Then the researchers decided to see what would happen if bacteria were reintroduced to the germ-free mice. But not just any bacteria. They inoculated mice with one specific organism, an unculturable bug from a group known as segmented filamentous bacteria. In prior studies, these bacteria had been shown to lead to intestinal inflammation and, more intriguingly, to induce in the gut the appearance of a particular immune-system cell known as Th17. Th17 cells are a type of T helper cell — cells that help activate and direct other immune system cells. Furthermore, Th17 cells induce the inflammatory cascade that leads to multiple sclerosis in animals.

“The question was, if this organism is inducing Th17 cells in the gut, will it be able to do so in the brain and central nervous system?” Mazmanian says. “Furthermore, with that one organism, can we restore to sterile animals the entire inflammatory response normally seen in animals with hundreds of species of gut bacteria?”

The answer? Yes on all counts. Giving the formerly germ-free mice a dose of one species of segmented filamentous bacteria induced Th17 not only in the gut but in the central nervous system and brain — and caused the formerly healthy mice to become ill with MS-like symptoms.

“It definitely shows that gut microbes have a strong role in MS, because the genetics of the animals were the same. In fact, everything was the same except for the presence of those otherwise benign bacteria, which are clearly playing a role in shaping the immune system,” Mazmanian says. “This study shows for the first time that specific intestinal bacteria have a significant role in affecting the nervous system during MS — and they do so from the gut, an anatomical location very, very far from the brain.”

Mazmanian and his colleagues don’t, however, suggest that gut bacteria are the direct cause of multiple sclerosis, which is known to be genetically linked. Rather, the bacteria may be helping to shape the immune system’s inflammatory response, thus creating conditions that could allow the disease to develop. Indeed, multiple sclerosis also has a strong environmental component; identical twins, who possess the same genome and share all of their genes, only have a 25 percent chance of sharing the disease. “We would like to suggest that gut bacteria may be the missing environmental component,” he says.

For their part, Th17 cells are needed for the immune system to properly combat infection. Problems only arise when the cells are activated in the absence of infection — just as disease can arise, Mazmanian and others suspect, when the species composition of gut bacteria become imbalanced, say, by changes in diet, because of improved hygiene (which kills off the beneficial bacteria as well as the dangerous ones), or because of stress or antibiotic use. One impact of the dysregulation of normal gut bacterial populations — a phenomenon dubbed “dysbiosis” — may be the rising rate of multiple sclerosis seen in recent years in more hygienic societies.

“As we live cleaner, we’re not just changing our exposure to infectious agents, but we’re changing our relationship with the entire microbial world, both around and inside us, and we may be altering the balance between pro- and anti-inflammatory bacteria,” leading to diseases like MS, Mazmanian says. “Perhaps treatments for diseases such as multiple sclerosis may someday include probiotic bacteria that can restore normal immune function in the gut… and the brain.”

The work was supported by funding from the California Institute of Technology, the Weston Havens Foundation, and the Edward Mallinckrodt, Jr. Foundation.

In the absence of bacteria in the intestines, pro-inflammatory Th17 cells do not develop in either the gut or the central nervous system; and animals do not develop disease (top panel). When animals are colonized with symbiotic segmented filamentous bacteria, Th17 cell differentiation is induced in the gut. Th17 cells promote experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, an animal model for multiple sclerosis. In this way, non-pathogenic bacteria of the microbiota promote disease by shaping the immune response in both the gut and the brain (top panel). (Credit: Lee, Mazmanian/Caltech; modified from Savidge TC et al. Laboratory Investigation 2007.

Story Source:

The above story is reprinted (with editorial adaptations by ScienceDaily staff) from materials provided by California Institute of Technology.

Journal Reference:

Sarkis K. Mazmanian et al. Pro-inflammatory T-cell responses to gut microbiota promote experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. PNAS, July 19, 2010