Guest guest Posted July 23, 2004 Report Share Posted July 23, 2004 The latest Journal of (June 2004) has a rather long discussion of healing crisis and . It proposes ways to categorize different unwelcome reactions to treatment. doug On Jul 22, 2004, at 11:40 PM, Chinese Medicine wrote: > > In a message dated 7/22/04 2:02:58 AM, > Chinese Medicine writes: > > << 1) mainstream Chinese medicine does not say that a healing crisis > is a > > necessary part of the healing process in the treatment of disease. > > This does not mean that in certain circumstances, such as in > > chong/parasitic diseases, it doesn't happen. It is a specialized > > situation, not a given. > > Lon: I'd say that this is true. I'd only expect what i'd calla healing > crisis > to occur when depth treatment was being given. Although, its important > to > note that what a healing crisis is can occur quite subtly in the > realms of doubt, > fear, and desire. > > > 2) sometimes what we perceive as a 'healing crisis' may mean wrong > > treatment, i.e. too much needle stimulus in acupuncture, toxicity from > > herbs or supplements. >> > > Lon: This is precisely why a comprehensive intake is needed as well as > a > correct understanding of how an actual healing crisis manifests. I've > had patients > who've come for diagnosis state something to this effect: " I've been > taking > this (homeopathic, nutritional, herbal supplement, diet) and my bowels > have > been loose (my kidneys hurt-whatever) for the last 4 months and my > chiropractor > (homeopath, naturopath, acupuncturist) tells me I'm " cleansing " and > that this > is a healing crisis. " --A healing crisis last 48 hours at most. Either > the > above patient is getting sicker and/or being poisoned by their > practitioner. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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