Guest guest Posted January 2, 2007 Report Share Posted January 2, 2007 Mon, 1 Jan 2007 08:45:45 –0800, " " <johnkokko wrote: >>… The Nguyen Van Nghi group is also in the process of translating several classics… Thanks for the lead. Any further translations help in the process of triangulating among them to get a better sense of what's really, maybe, there in the classics. and: >> Has anyone used this fascinating pulse system [RenYing] in practice? I'm not sure if you're asking about Van Nghi's pulse system, or using RenYing in general. I have experienced a pulse system using RenYing (at the carotid). Dan Lobash was demonstrating it at an expo a couple of years ago. The author was Dr. Tae Woo Yoo, the Korean luminary best known for his " Koryo Hand Therapy (KHT) " system. Dan gave me a copy of a paper by Dr. Yoo outlining his reincarnation of the NeiJing practice. In his free demo, he was comparing carotid and wrist pulses for relative strength, then did hand-needling accordingly. Scanning a number of websites (Dan's (http://www.khtsystems.com), one in NY, one in Korea, etc.) I found no book or other mention of this pulse system. You might get in touch with Dan. He was very open about giving me the paper (which I probably still have, somewhere). Tae Woo Yoo made a memorable appearance at the first Pacific Symposium in 1989 (the taped recording is still available from CRS). Charisma! He did demonstrations of KHT with " miraculous " results, and talked about his ability to heal over long-distance telephone. He's apparently quite a scholar, too. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 3, 2007 Report Share Posted January 3, 2007 Chris, Thanks for your insights. I'll contact 'Doctor Dan' and ask about the system and paper. Funny thing is I also have been diagnosed via the carotid artery/ radial artery pulse system from Dan Lobash/ Dr. Tae Woo and am wearing a silver ring on my right water finger to prove it... still wearing it. When I take it off, I definitely feel off. There are yogis in India and Tibet who also prescribe precious metal and gem rings/ amulets. I know he traveled around the country in his RV for conferences, a real unique free spirit. Definitely the strangest pulse taking I've seen, efficient and accurate. What I do remember is that the carotid artery/radial artery diagnosis conferred with the Omura O-ring test he also performed. I'll contact the Jung Tao school and see if Sean Marshall has other perspectives on Lingshu Chapters 9, 48, 49. Thanks, K. On 1/1/07, chris_macie < wrote: > > Mon, 1 Jan 2007 08:45:45 –0800, " " <johnkokko<johnkokko%40gmail.com>> > wrote: > >>… The Nguyen Van Nghi group is also in the process of translating > several classics… > > Thanks for the lead. Any further translations help in the process of > triangulating among them to get a better sense of what's really, > maybe, there in the classics. > > and: > >> Has anyone used this fascinating pulse system [RenYing] in practice? > > I'm not sure if you're asking about Van Nghi's pulse system, or using > RenYing in general. > > I have experienced a pulse system using RenYing (at the carotid). Dan > Lobash was demonstrating it at an expo a couple of years ago. The > author was Dr. Tae Woo Yoo, the Korean luminary best known for his > " Koryo Hand Therapy (KHT) " system. Dan gave me a copy of a paper by > Dr. Yoo outlining his reincarnation of the NeiJing practice. In his > free demo, he was comparing carotid and wrist pulses for relative > strength, then did hand-needling accordingly. > > Scanning a number of websites (Dan's (http://www.khtsystems.com), one > in NY, one in Korea, etc.) I found no book or other mention of this > pulse system. You might get in touch with Dan. He was very open about > giving me the paper (which I probably still have, somewhere). > > Tae Woo Yoo made a memorable appearance at the first Pacific Symposium > in 1989 (the taped recording is still available from CRS). Charisma! > He did demonstrations of KHT with " miraculous " results, and talked > about his ability to heal over long-distance telephone. He's > apparently quite a scholar, too. > > > > > -- 'Freedom from the desire for an answer is essential to the understanding of a problem.' Jiddu Krishnamurti Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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