Interview: Integrating PSE Into Chiropractic and Kinesiology Practice
At DFW Holistic Health in Dallas, Texas, works a team of chiropractors and certified clinical nutritionists who practice Applied Kinesiology to combine structural and functional approaches to health in a deeply integrative way. Their philosophy centers on restoring balance, supporting the body’s natural intelligence, and addressing both the physical and energetic dimensions of well-being.
Dr. Gasper and her colleague, Dr. Phillips, founders of DFW Holistic Health, have begun integrating Psychosomatic Energetics (PSE) into their therapeutic concept. In this interview, Dr. Gasper discusses how their practice has evolved, what motivates her holistic perspective, and how PSE is enhancing the diagnostic and therapeutic tools already in use.
Dr. Gasper, could you share a bit about your background and how you first discovered Psychosomatic Energetics (PSE)?
Absolutely. I was introduced to PSE in 2019 at an ICAK symposium. One of the speakers talked about how trauma and emotions are stored in the body. At that time, I was working through my own emotional issues and was already exploring that dimension personally. Her presentation resonated deeply with me and Dr Phillips.
My practice partner and I travelled to Florida shortly after to receive treatment ourselves, and the experience was profound from the very first session. We immediately started sending patients there, and eventually our own patients encouraged us to integrate PSE into our clinic. Once we decided to do it, it became one of the most important things we offer today.
Your practice combines chiropractic care, applied kinesiology, nutrition, and now PSE. What connects these approaches?
In our practice, we look at the whole person – structure, biochemistry, emotions, and subtle energy. When we have done the chiropractic work, soft-tissue work, nutrition, and everything else, and something still isn’t changing, that’s usually when emotional patterns are trying to surface.
PSE bridges that gap. It gives us a way to access subconscious conflicts that influence the nervous system and physical symptoms. It helps us address what remains unresolved after the physical and biochemical work is done.
What made your experience with PSE so profound compared to other therapies?
I experienced rapid and meaningful improvements in sleep, digestion, emotional balance, and long-standing sensitivities. What stood out to me was that PSE works directly with subconscious patterns formed in early childhood – often before analytical thinking develops. By bringing these patterns to the surface, PSE enables genuine processing and release, something I had not found to the same degree in other therapeutic approaches.
Many practitioners observe emotional patterns behind chronic symptoms. How do you explain PSE to patients who present with unresolved physical issues?
I usually start by explaining that “the body is always talking”, that emotions are stored in the tissues and that we have energy centers – the chakras – that correspond to certain organs and emotions. When pain or dysfunction persists despite physical treatment, this often signals emotional material stored in the tissues.
For example, neck pain that won’t improve often relates to communication or feeling unheard. Digestive issues can be linked to processing life experiences. When I see these patterns, I talk to the patient about what the body might be trying to express, and then I explain how PSE can identify the affected energy centers and unresolved emotional conflicts, helping the body release what standard treatments cannot reach.
How does PSE address subconscious beliefs and early-life programming?
I explain to patients that from ages 0–7, we live in a theta brainwave state – basically a hypnotic state – where we absorb everything without analytical thinking. During that time, we pick up belief systems from our caregivers, whether the experiences were overtly traumatic or simply shaped by their own limitations or expectations. These beliefs can create microtraumas, chronic stress, perfectionism, anxiety, or lifelong patterns of not feeling “good enough.”
The PSE remedies work through energy and frequency. When there’s a vibrational match to something held in the body, the remedy resonates with stored patterns, brings them into awareness, and helps shift the “lens” through which a person sees themselves and life. Patients often describe this as putting on a new pair of glasses.
Could you share some cases where PSE has made a significant difference?
Yes, there are several that stand out.
One was a 17-year-old girl whose main theme turned out to be “isolation.” Only later did her mother remember that she had been separated from her as a newborn and placed in a neonatal unit. She had carried that emotional imprint her whole life without realizing it.
Another patient grew up with severe emotional trauma, decades of therapy, and lifelong struggles with bulimia and alcoholism. Over time on the remedies, she became genuinely empowered and far more compassionate toward herself.
I’ve also seen families transform – for example, a mother who initially felt tension and distance toward her young children developed a deeply loving relationship with them after working through her own unresolved patterns.
Patients with chronic pain, digestive issues, or persistent sleep disturbances often see improvements once emotional conflicts surface and resolve.
All cases share some things in common – patients describe feeling lighter, empowered, clearer, more compassionate and more emotionally stable.
Some skeptics wonder how homeopathic remedies can influence subconscious beliefs. How do you explain this?
I’m very honest: I don’t know exactly how it works – but I know that it does.
High-potency homeopathic remedies work through energy and frequency, and our bodies respond to frequency. The remedies seem to activate what’s already stored in the tissues, bringing it into awareness so it can be processed and released. While the exact mechanism is not fully understood, the consistent clinical results speak for themselves.
Patients consistently report that life looks different afterward – again, it’s like seeing through a new lens.
Can PSE help people who don’t feel traumatized but feel blocked or unfulfilled?
Definitely. I have patients who come in saying, “Nothing is really wrong, but something feels missing.” And often, once the remedies start working, deeper layers show up that they didn’t realize were influencing them.
As they move through those layers, they gain clarity, purpose, and a new sense of direction. Even people who think they’ve already dealt with their past often discover things they didn’t know were there.
How long does it typically take for patients to notice meaningful change?
I am always very open: this is not a quick-fix therapy.
Most patients notice initial shifts within the first month – maybe they sleep better, feel calmer, or see a shift in relationships. But the deeper, more life-changing results happen over months to years.
The most significant transformations often emerge around the one-year mark. In my own case, I had significant improvements in sleep, digestion, and even long-standing food sensitivities within the first year.
PSE resembles a journey rather than symptomatic treatment – but one that profoundly restructures emotional and physical health.
What advice do you have for practitioners interested in incorporating PSE?
My biggest recommendation is: experience PSE personally before offering it to patients.
You have to know what it feels like when your own body processes these shifts. That experience and first-hand understanding makes you a better guide for your patients.
After that, simply get started. The training gives you the foundation, and the rest comes from practice. Today, I use PSE with nearly all patients because everyone carries unresolved emotional patterns that affect health.
Thank you, Dr. Gasper, for taking the time to speak with us and share your experiences. We truly appreciate your openness and the insights you brought to this conversation.
This interview was conducted by Nick Fransen in November 2025