Guest guest Posted April 15, 2009 Report Share Posted April 15, 2009 I very successfully use a combination of EFT tapping and Donna's technique of "Taking the teeth out of a toothache". I also suggest you tap away any fear surrounding the issue of your teeth. A dentist almost scared me into pulling out 2 teeth. His fear installation worked very well at the time and I almost fell into it except I had some holidays lined up and so postoned the intervention. I made the wise decision of not seeing him again on my return, and after almost 15 years I still have those teeth and I'm very happy with them thank you! Francois Does anyone know of how to heal a toothache... or have any suggestions. Hi Susan, What does seem to work well for many is to tapp on it. Run the EFT (or my Inner Demon Destroyer) short sequence on it a couple of times and the pain will drop down to a zero. The good news is "healing" also follows in many cases. It has been scientifically established that (if not for all), for most medical conditons there is an underlying emotional condition which is presently unresolved. John La Tourrette, PhD PS where ever there is pain there is congested energy. So just tapping on the teeth/gums themselves can also release the energy, and in releasing the congested energy, start the path to healing the tooth. Donna does talk about 'healing teeth' in her book. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 16, 2009 Report Share Posted April 16, 2009 >Does anyone know of how to heal a toothache... or have any suggestions. - I Believe in Energy Medicine and Energy Healing. I know from experience that it works. And I respect doc's approach to releasing congested Energy. However, Energy, IMO, is part of the holistic approach. We also have to deal with Chemistry, Biochemistry and such basic realities as Decay [The weak interactive Force of Quantum Physics, the second law of thermodynamics.] The pain may be caused by emotional tensions but more often than not it's acidic condition left by plaque that has eroded the enamel and that is Irreversible. In short, pain is a signal from our physical body To our physical body that something is Wrong here and needs attention. Any method we use to treat only the Symptom [pain] is counter productive to fixing the underlying problem. Fix the problem and the Pain disappears. Fix the Pain and the problem remains. Focus on fixing the tooth, not the toothache. Pain is not your enemy it is your Friend. Respect it. rusty. - Francois Olivier Tuesday, April 14, 2009 11:08 PM Re: how to heal a toothache! I very successfully use a combination of EFT tapping and Donna's technique of " Taking the teeth out of a toothache " . I also suggest you tap away any fear surrounding the issue of your teeth. A dentist almost scared me into pulling out 2 teeth. His fear installation worked very well at the time and I almost fell into it except I had some holidays lined up and so postoned the intervention. I made the wise decision of not seeing him again on my return, and after almost 15 years I still have those teeth and I'm very happy with them thank you! Francois Does anyone know of how to heal a toothache... or have any suggestions. Hi Susan, What does seem to work well for many is to tapp on it. Run the EFT (or my Inner Demon Destroyer) short sequence on it a couple of times and the pain will drop down to a zero. The good news is " healing " also follows in many cases. It has been scientifically established that (if not for all), for most medical conditons there is an underlying emotional condition which is presently unresolved. John La Tourrette, PhD PS where ever there is pain there is congested energy. So just tapping on the teeth/gums themselves can also release the energy, and in releasing the congested energy, start the path to healing the tooth. Donna does talk about 'healing teeth' in her book. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 17, 2009 Report Share Posted April 17, 2009 On Thu, Apr 16, 2009 at 2:25 AM, rusty <lwinmorgan wrote: > ... > > The pain may be caused by emotional tensions but more often than not it's acidic > condition left by plaque that has eroded the enamel and that is Irreversible. > > ... Hi Rusty, Mary Nelson posted a link (Nov. 2006, #6685) to Gerard Judd's site about dental hygiene, and your statement directly contradicts Dr. Judd's points 4 and 5: " A great amount of REPUTABLE DENTAL RESEARCH proves the following: ... 4. Teeth reenamalize when clean. TO MAKE TEETH CLEAN ONE BRUSHES WITH ANY BAR SOAP. ... 5. Taking calcium and phosphate in the diet results in reenamelization of the teeth, but only when they are clean. ... " Gerard Judd's site has disappeared, but is still available at archive.org: http://web.archive.org/web/20070808121952/http://gerardjudd.com/summation.htm My belated thanks for posting that link, Mary. I promptly added the soap to my oral hygiene arsenal, and it does work well. I now switch off between baking soda and bar soap. -james knochel Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 17, 2009 Report Share Posted April 17, 2009 Hi, Ah yes, teeth... I just had a new bridge put in, only after excruciating tooth and jaw pain caused by a cracked tooth and an accompanying abscess. I did do the IDD on the pain. It worked until I felt an annoying twinge and suddenly the excruciating tooth and jaw pain roared back. I did do tapping and energy work. That didn't work too well for me at the time. The pain might have kept my energy's scrambled and/or running backward. I did go to level, which worked as well as the IDD did. What did work was script doses of ibuprofen and the antibiotics that I got from my dentist the next morning. That and the root canal ten days later... And the new bridge two weeks after that. Teeth are important. This information from Dr. Gerard Judd PHD is something I wish I and my parents had known a long time ago. I poked around on google and at scribd.com for more on Dr. Gerard Judd PHD and found even more good information. Thanks James, -Mark , james knochel <knochj wrote: > > On Thu, Apr 16, 2009 at 2:25 AM, rusty <lwinmorgan wrote: > > > ... > > > > The pain may be caused by emotional tensions but more often than not it's acidic > > condition left by plaque that has eroded the enamel and that is Irreversible. > > > > ... > > Hi Rusty, > > Mary Nelson posted a link (Nov. 2006, #6685) to Gerard Judd's site > about dental hygiene, and your statement directly contradicts Dr. > Judd's points 4 and 5: > > " A great amount of REPUTABLE DENTAL RESEARCH proves the following: ... > > 4. Teeth reenamalize when clean. TO MAKE TEETH CLEAN ONE BRUSHES > WITH ANY BAR SOAP. ... > 5. Taking calcium and phosphate in the diet results in > reenamelization of the teeth, but only when they are clean. ... " > > Gerard Judd's site has disappeared, but is still available at archive.org: > > http://web.archive.org/web/20070808121952/http://gerardjudd.com/summation.htm > > My belated thanks for posting that link, Mary. I promptly added the > soap to my oral hygiene arsenal, and it does work well. I now switch > off between baking soda and bar soap. > > -james knochel > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2009 Report Share Posted April 18, 2009 After I was reminded of the link I had sent in on Dr. Judd, I looked again. He was dead set against glycerin because it actually damages the teeth by stopping the process of natural recovery for our enamel. Guess that almost any toothpaste on the market has in it?? I threw away one tube of toothpaste because it seemed like my gums were bleeding more when I used it. Heritage (Casey's ARE products) has a tooth powder that did not list glycerin. Some of the other powders also had glycerin. Don't know if Judd is right and am not willing to find out the hard way that he is. It sounds like using energy work is better to do before you can get a dentist's appointment to check out the problem. Maybe it could solve tooth pain sometimes. Don't really know for sure. Mary Nelson www.eft4everyone.com Mark Holt wrote: > Hi, > > Ah yes, teeth... I just had a new bridge put in, only after excruciating tooth and jaw pain caused by a cracked tooth and an accompanying abscess. > > I did do the IDD on the pain. It worked until I felt an annoying twinge and suddenly the excruciating tooth and jaw pain roared back. I did do tapping and energy work. That didn't work too well for me at the time. The pain might have kept my energy's scrambled and/or running backward. I did go to level, which worked as well as the IDD did. > > What did work was script doses of ibuprofen and the antibiotics that I got from my dentist the next morning. That and the root canal ten days later... And the new bridge two weeks after that. > > Teeth are important. This information from Dr. Gerard Judd PHD is something I wish I and my parents had known a long time ago. > > I poked around on google and at scribd.com for more on Dr. Gerard Judd PHD and found even more good information. > > Thanks James, > > -Mark > > , james knochel <knochj wrote: > >> On Thu, Apr 16, 2009 at 2:25 AM, rusty <lwinmorgan wrote: >> >> ... >> >>> The pain may be caused by emotional tensions but more often than not it's acidic >>> condition left by plaque that has eroded the enamel and that is Irreversible. >>> >>> ... >>> >> Hi Rusty, >> >> Mary Nelson posted a link (Nov. 2006, #6685) to Gerard Judd's site >> about dental hygiene, and your statement directly contradicts Dr. >> Judd's points 4 and 5: >> >> " A great amount of REPUTABLE DENTAL RESEARCH proves the following: ... >> >> 4. Teeth reenamalize when clean. TO MAKE TEETH CLEAN ONE BRUSHES >> WITH ANY BAR SOAP. ... >> 5. Taking calcium and phosphate in the diet results in >> reenamelization of the teeth, but only when they are clean. ... " >> >> Gerard Judd's site has disappeared, but is still available at archive.org: >> >> http://web.archive.org/web/20070808121952/http://gerardjudd.com/summation.htm >> >> My belated thanks for posting that link, Mary. I promptly added the >> soap to my oral hygiene arsenal, and it does work well. I now switch >> off between baking soda and bar soap. >> >> -james knochel >> >> > > > > > --- > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2009 Report Share Posted April 18, 2009 I've given my dentist a copy of David Feinstein's dvd on EP -- for patients with a fear of the dental experience When I'm in the chair, I just visualize tiny figure 8's in the area he's working on, while he works away. ( I have a really cool dentist) Actually had an amazing, profound experience with those figure 8's during a root canal An abscessed tooth is a different level of pain to a simple cavity -- plus your face really swells up. It's usually the root that gets infected, and there is no place for all the puss and stuff to go. Draining the infection (if it is an infection) is a bit tricky. My dad said that back in his day, the cure was a door, a door knob and a length of thin rope.... Helen > > Mark Holt wrote: >> Hi, >> >> Ah yes, teeth... I just had a new bridge put in, only after >> excruciating tooth and jaw pain caused by a cracked tooth and an >> accompanying abscess. >> >> I did do the IDD on the pain. It worked until I felt an annoying >> twinge and suddenly the excruciating tooth and jaw pain roared >> back. I did do tapping and energy work. That didn't work too well >> for me at the time. The pain might have kept my energy's scrambled >> and/or running backward. I did go to level, which worked as well >> as the IDD did. >> >> What did work was script doses of ibuprofen and the antibiotics >> that I got from my dentist the next morning. That and the root >> canal ten days later... And the new bridge two weeks after that. >> >> Teeth are important. This information from Dr. Gerard Judd PHD is >> something I wish I and my parents had known a long time ago. >> >> I poked around on google and at scribd.com for more on Dr. Gerard >> Judd PHD and found even more good information. >> >> Thanks James, >> >> -Mark >> >> - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2009 Report Share Posted April 18, 2009 Doc, Mark, Mary, Francois, Rusty, James, Debi , GroupThank you for all your responses. They are greatly appreciated.The site is so tender that I was not able to tap it directly. Still I did eft on the pain in general and the frustration which helped.I am continuing with baking soda and EFT.. I agree with Dr. Judd that it is the acid causing the damage. Thank you for sending the link James. Thank you Mark for the additional info on Google. I have been using warm compresses which alleviate the pain and baking soda for alkalinizing.Still, it seems it might be a good idea to get an appt with the dentist. Susan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2009 Report Share Posted April 19, 2009 , s <susanj324 wrote: > I am continuing with baking soda and EFT.. I agree with Dr. Judd that it is the acid causing the damage. Actually it was Edgar Cayce who came up with the baking soda, salt tooth cleansing remedy back in the 20's. Science has validated his method during the 90's. I still remember sitting to a dentist back in the 90's on a plane. He was talking about this tremendous new dental paste they were making...blab, blab, And how 'no cavities'. He thought I was wacko when I mentioned it was one of the many resources given in the 'readings'. John La Tourrette, PhD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 21, 2009 Report Share Posted April 21, 2009 Doc,Thanks for the info on Cayce. I remember Baking soda from a science project that I did (many years ago...) and no there was no baking soda in toothpaste at that time. should have developed it huh>>>>I did not know about Cayce.Thanks for the reference to Feinstein ...to you and Helen.Susan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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