Guest guest Posted September 20, 2005 Report Share Posted September 20, 2005 Hi All, Ignore this if you believe strongly that shamanic practices and 6th sense (Psi) are loopy. Otherwise, read on. In trained hands, dowsing (divining, focused will to receive and amplify subliminal clues), has practical applications in most branches of healing - acupuncture, allergen detection, broadcast therapy, counselling, herbal medicine, homeopathy, manipulative therapies, nutritional supplementation, prayer therapy, radiaesthesia, radionics, etc. Dowsing can help in diagnosis, identification of energy blocks or imbalances, remedy selection, dosage selection, potency selection, Channel selection, acupoint selection, etc. To explore this possibility, print off and study: " LETTER TO ROBIN - A Mini-Course in Pendulum Dowsing " by Walt Woods at http://go.to/LetterToRobin Enjoy. Best regards, Tel: (H): +353-(0) or (M): +353-(0) Ireland. Tel: (W): +353-(0) or (M): +353-(0) " Man who says it can't be done should not interrupt man doing it " - Chinese Proverb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 20, 2005 Report Share Posted September 20, 2005 Ignore this if you believe strongly that shamanic practices and 6th sense (Psi) are loopy. Otherwise, read on. When I first went into practise 20 years ago and was working in Chinatown , Sydney I used to treat a patient with herbs and was getting no where or so I thought. After 2 months I said I think I need to refer because I am not sure why you are not responding. He said, no the herbs you are presribing are exactt right for me because he has them muscle tested them each time when he goes home. I didn't know what it was at the time. Anyway, I did an experiment and picked herbs from the draws , he held them and someone else did the testing. This guy or person doing the testing didn't know the identification of any herbs. I tried all sorts of herbs, fu zi, ba dou and other toxic herbs and he always tested negative, for the herbs that I felt or knew were appropriate for him, he tested positve. I concluded that I was good at diagnosis and selecting the correct medicines, I am probably just as fast diagnosising and writing scripts as I would be using muscle tests. Recently I attended a Stephen Birch worshop on the ion pumping cords and Japanese diagnosis. They do a lot of diagnosis using abdominal palpation etc. I was a model and three very experienced Makanka practitioners who also attended diagnosed me , including Birch. They all picked a different diagnosis and could feel different things in the abdomen to conclude their diagnosis. All these practitioners are busy and see and help many patients yet all obviuosly come up with different treatments etc. At the last college I worked in Christchurch, it was a 5 element Worsley style college and they tried to convert me for years. When any one did my " CF " it was always different. When I see a TCM practitoner at least it is always the same stuff,...spleen xu, kidney xu, liver stasis etc Though having said all this , I had contemplated using a pendulum to pick lotto numbers... :-) Heiko Lade M.H.Sc.(TCM) Lecturer and clinic supervisor Auckland College of Natural Medicine Website: www.acnm.co.nz - Pa-l ; PVA-L ; Chinese Medicine Cc: MMMeeting ; likemlist ; Traditional Chinese Herbal Medicine Tuesday, September 20, 2005 9:48 PM Dowsing applications in the healing arts Hi All, Ignore this if you believe strongly that shamanic practices and 6th sense (Psi) are loopy. Otherwise, read on. In trained hands, dowsing (divining, focused will to receive and amplify subliminal clues), has practical applications in most branches of healing - acupuncture, allergen detection, broadcast therapy, counselling, herbal medicine, homeopathy, manipulative therapies, nutritional supplementation, prayer therapy, radiaesthesia, radionics, etc. Dowsing can help in diagnosis, identification of energy blocks or imbalances, remedy selection, dosage selection, potency selection, Channel selection, acupoint selection, etc. To explore this possibility, print off and study: " LETTER TO ROBIN - A Mini-Course in Pendulum Dowsing " by Walt Woods at http://go.to/LetterToRobin Enjoy. Best regards, Tel: (H): +353-(0) or (M): +353-(0) Ireland. Tel: (W): +353-(0) or (M): +353-(0) " Man who says it can't be done should not interrupt man doing it " - Chinese Proverb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 20, 2005 Report Share Posted September 20, 2005 Recently I attended a Stephen Birch worshop on the ion pumping cords and Japanese diagnosis. They do a lot of diagnosis using abdominal palpation etc. I was a model and three very experienced Makanka practitioners who also attended diagnosed me , including Birch. They all picked a different diagnosis and could feel different things in the abdomen to conclude their diagnosis. All these practitioners are busy and see and help many patients yet all obviuosly come up with different treatments etc. >>>>> The little dirty secret Oakland, CA 94609 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 20, 2005 Report Share Posted September 20, 2005 On Sep 20, 2005, at 4:30 PM, wrote: > Recently I attended a Stephen Birch worshop on the ion pumping > cords and Japanese diagnosis. They do a lot of diagnosis using > abdominal palpation etc. I was a model and three very experienced > Makanka practitioners who also attended diagnosed me , including > Birch. They all picked a different diagnosis and could feel > different things in the abdomen to conclude their diagnosis. All > these practitioners are busy and see and help many patients yet all > obviuosly come up with different treatments etc. > >>>>>> >>>>>> > The little dirty secret So, what's their secret to having a successful practice? Is it their personality, clinical outcomes, entertainment value of their diagnostic techniques? -- Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 20, 2005 Report Share Posted September 20, 2005 So, what's their secret to having a successful practice? Is it their personality, clinical outcomes, entertainment value of their diagnostic techniques? >>>>>> That is the million dolor question. If all take a different road for using needles yet all get good results one must assume it has nothing to do with the needles. It must be something else.That would be the scientific rational. You tell me. Oakland, CA 94609 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 20, 2005 Report Share Posted September 20, 2005 Al wrote , what's their secret to having a successful practice? Is it their personality, clinical outcomes, entertainment value of their diagnostic techniques? perhaps you just stick needles in anywhere and you will get a result of some sorts.... :-) add some personality, confidence etc...I wish I knew Its is interesting as when I supervise clinic I have noticed beginner students can get some great results with limited diagnosis and experience Heiko Lade M.H.Sc.(TCM) Lecturer and clinic supervisor Auckland College of Natural Medicine Website: www.acnm.co.nz - Wednesday, September 21, 2005 11:50 AM Re: Dowsing applications in the healing arts On Sep 20, 2005, at 4:30 PM, wrote: > Recently I attended a Stephen Birch worshop on the ion pumping > cords and Japanese diagnosis. They do a lot of diagnosis using > abdominal palpation etc. I was a model and three very experienced > Makanka practitioners who also attended diagnosed me , including > Birch. They all picked a different diagnosis and could feel > different things in the abdomen to conclude their diagnosis. All > these practitioners are busy and see and help many patients yet all > obviuosly come up with different treatments etc. > >>>>>> >>>>>> > The little dirty secret So, what's their secret to having a successful practice? Is it their personality, clinical outcomes, entertainment value of their diagnostic techniques? -- Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. Chinese Herbal Medicine offers various professional services, including board approved continuing education classes, an annual conference and a free discussion forum in Chinese Herbal Medicine. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 21, 2005 Report Share Posted September 21, 2005 It is for this reason that I'm less critical of non-standard acupuncture techniques than I have been in the past. " Its all good " as we say in LA. As for me, I favor the herbs that are not always good. : ) On Sep 20, 2005, at 5:01 PM, wrote: > So, what's their secret to having a successful practice? Is it their > personality, clinical outcomes, entertainment value of their > diagnostic techniques? > >>>>>>> >>>>>>> > That is the million dolor question. If all take a different road > for using needles yet all get good results one must assume it has > nothing to do with the needles. It must be something else.That > would be the scientific rational. You tell me. -- Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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