Becky Heaton, Owner

 

Becky is a Certified Aromatherapist specializing in Clinical Aromatherapy (September 2021) and a Certified Ear Candling Therapist (November 2022). She received these certifications from the Aromatherapy Institute, Inc. in Dallas, TX.

Becky is a graduate of Trinity College of Natural Health with degrees as Nutritional Consultant (April 2014), Natural Health Professional (January 2015), Traditional Naturopath (January 2018), and Master Iridologist (March 2018).

Becky offers wellness consultations for her clients and works closely with them in their journey to self-healing. She develops home care programs to encourage the individual to practice prevention and to take full responsibility for his/her own health. It is very empowering to have access to our own healing, improving the quality of our health. Her passion is to educate by providing knowledge, skills, and tools to help create awareness for the self-healing of the body, mind, and spirit.

Becky joined Lavanda in July 2018 as the Assistant to the Founder, Maria-Dolores Trujillo. Since joining, Becky has been trained, coached, mentored by and is a protégé of Maria-Dolores.

On March 11, 2020, Becky became the Owner of Lavanda Aromatherapy and Botanical Products, LLC. Maria-Dolores continues to be very involved as a personal consultant, advisor and mentor to Becky.

In May 2023, Becky opened the Naturopathy Center for Mind and Body Wellness located in Waxahachie, TX. Her services include, Wellness Consultations, Ear Candling Therapy and Electromedicine Pain Management therapy using the FDA approved WellnessPro® device.

Becky and Maria-Dolores continue to work diligently together in the research and development of new formulas by providing the quality of products our clients and customers are accustomed to.

WHAT IS CLINICAL AROMATHERAPY?

Clinical Aromatherapy is practiced by certified aromatherapists, specialized on the clinical modality, who after performing individual consultations, create personalized home care programs and formulations to be applied externally.

Attention is given to medicinal and therapeutic action of the oils, emphasis is placed on quality, concentration, and potency based on their botanical origin, plant producing organ, chemical constituents, and biochemical specificity (chemotypes).

The practice of Clinical Aromatherapy can be seen as a complementary or preventative therapy, within the alternative medicine. It involves selecting essential oils for their medicinal properties, combining them with specific carriers, and taking into consideration the person as a whole, as well as the effects the oils produce on the body, mind and spirit.

WHAT IS NATUROPATHY?

To promote healing and wellness, naturally.

The term “Naturopathy” refers to a non-invasive natural medicine which embraces therapies and procedures that work in harmony with nature in the restoration and support of the body’s defense systems against numerous health disorders.  In Naturopathy, correction of the cause is the most plausible way of eliminating the symptoms and restoring health and balance to the individual.

What is a Traditional Naturopath?

A Traditional Naturopath is a trained specialist in subjects such as: anatomy, physiology, dietary evaluations, nutrition, herbology, acupressure, muscle relation and structural normalization, homeopathy and iridology.  They tailor the healing modality to the needs of the individual with methods which are effective for both chronic and acute problems.  Traditional Naturopaths cooperate with all branches of medical science, referring individuals to other practitioners for diagnosis treatment when appropriate.

The Naturopathic Philosophy advocates 7 principles.

1. Do no Harm – Traditional Naturopathy embraces only therapies/procedures designed to enhance healing and produce wellness. 

2. Recognize - the healing power of nature.  There is a healing power in nature and this principal is the basis for all of naturopathy.

3. Identifying the cause – The correction of the cause is the most plausible way of eliminating the symptoms and restoring health to the person.

4. Involve the total person – Traditional Naturopaths are aware that a person can have a physical, spiritual or emotional illness.  The chosen therapy is determined by what kind of problem the person is experiencing. 

5. Teach rather than treat – Naturopathic philosophy places the responsibility for wellness with the individual. The goal is to help the person empower themselves to heal.

6. Identify the source – Other than in trauma-type injuries, seldom does the body have isolated mono-factorial conditions but rather experiences “dis-ease” as a consequence of a number of heath debilitating events. Dis means “deprived of” and ease means “comfort.”

7. Prevent “dis-ease” – There is an effective system based on natural restorative methods.  Traditional Naturopaths advise their clients on simple “dis-ease” prevention principles which are designed to restore health.

 
Brent Hale