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Run.

 

 

 

-Jason

 

 

 

Chinese Medicine

Chinese Medicine On Behalf Of

Whartenby!

Tuesday, December 02, 2008 12:19 PM

Chinese Medicine

Acutonics

 

 

 

Has anyone out there used tuning forks? If so, what do you think?

 

thanks,

Jamie

www.whartenby.com

 

 

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Are they that scary?

 

-

Chinese Medicine

Tuesday, December 02, 2008 1:55 PM

RE: Acutonics

 

 

Run.

 

-Jason

 

Chinese Medicine

Chinese Medicine On Behalf Of

Whartenby!

Tuesday, December 02, 2008 12:19 PM

Chinese Medicine

Acutonics

 

Has anyone out there used tuning forks? If so, what do you think?

 

thanks,

Jamie

www.whartenby.com

 

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Share on other sites

Jaimie-

 

I know this question has been discussed on this list before.

 

I've used them as a non-invasive way to treat for years. On one level they are

" poor-man's Ultrasound " , different frequencies harmonize and affect different

densities of tissue, especially useful with trigger-point therapy. On another

level they are a great way to stimulate acupoints, more than pressure, less than

needling. Those who practice Qi-Gung may find they are useful tool to help

develop other-body awareness, following the vibration in the body of the pt has

been great practice for myself as I learn to feel qi distribution in others.

 

I've used them with massage and acupressure to great effect and they draw the

curious when done in public ( " Whatcha doing? " ) which gives an opening to discuss

the benefits of associated arts.

 

Great for Pediatrics, kids love 'em.

 

Be well,

 

Larry

 

Larry Moore

L.Ac, RN,BSN,MSOM

Scottsdale Arizona

602-931-2529

 

 

 

 

In a message dated 12/02/08 14:38:28 Mountain Standard Time, jwhartenby

writes:

Are they that scary?

 

-

 

Chinese Medicine

Tuesday, December 02, 2008 1:55 PM

RE: Acutonics

 

Run.

 

-Jason

 

Chinese Medicine

Chinese Medicine On Behalf Of

Whartenby!

Tuesday, December 02, 2008 12:19 PM

Chinese Medicine

Acutonics

 

Has anyone out there used tuning forks? If so, what do you think?

 

thanks,

Jamie

www.whartenby.com

Recent Activity

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Is there a way to learn acutonics without paying an arm and a leg?

 

K.

 

 

 

On Tue, Dec 2, 2008 at 4:14 PM, galenway <Galenway wrote:

 

> Jaimie-

>

> I know this question has been discussed on this list before.

>

> I've used them as a non-invasive way to treat for years. On one level they

> are " poor-man's Ultrasound " , different frequencies harmonize and affect

> different densities of tissue, especially useful with trigger-point therapy.

> On another level they are a great way to stimulate acupoints, more than

> pressure, less than needling. Those who practice Qi-Gung may find they are

> useful tool to help develop other-body awareness, following the vibration in

> the body of the pt has been great practice for myself as I learn to feel qi

> distribution in others.

>

> I've used them with massage and acupressure to great effect and they draw

> the curious when done in public ( " Whatcha doing? " ) which gives an opening to

> discuss the benefits of associated arts.

>

> Great for Pediatrics, kids love 'em.

>

> Be well,

>

> Larry

>

> Larry Moore

> L.Ac, RN,BSN,MSOM

> Scottsdale Arizona

> 602-931-2529

>

>

> In a message dated 12/02/08 14:38:28 Mountain Standard Time,

> jwhartenby <jwhartenby%40cox.net> writes:

> Are they that scary?

>

> -

>

> To:

Chinese Medicine <Chinese Medicine%40yaho\

ogroups.com>

> Tuesday, December 02, 2008 1:55 PM

> RE: Acutonics

>

> Run.

>

> -Jason

>

>

Chinese Medicine <Chinese Medicine%40yaho\

ogroups.com>

>

[Chinese Medicine <Traditional_Chinese_Medicin\

e%40>]

> On Behalf Of

> Whartenby!

> Tuesday, December 02, 2008 12:19 PM

> To:

Chinese Medicine <Chinese Medicine%40yaho\

ogroups.com>

> Acutonics

>

> Has anyone out there used tuning forks? If so, what do you think?

>

> thanks,

> Jamie

> www.whartenby.com

> Recent Activity

> 3New Members

> Visit Your Group

> Health

> Asthma Triggers

> How you can

> identify them.

> Meditation and

> Lovingkindness

> A Group

> to share and learn.

> Need traffic?

> Drive customers

> With search ads

> on .

>

>

>

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Tuning forks should be considered to be an experimental technique,

with no background in traditional Chinese medical practice. In my

opinion, this means informing patients that it is experimental, with

no documented therapeutic benefits to the patient.

 

 

 

On Dec 2, 2008, at 11:19 AM, Whartenby! wrote:

 

> Has anyone out there used tuning forks? If so, what do you think?

>

> thanks,

> Jamie

> www.whartenby.com

>

>

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Share on other sites

A couple years back I researched tuning fork treatments and found, as in all

treatment protocols, the frequency of different acupoints varied with the

protocol author.  Tuning forks are not, in my opinion, a poor man's ultrasound

technique.  Tuning forks are pricey!  Tuning forks are effective demonstrators

of resonance, which restore energy to its original configuration. 

 

On occasion I use my tuning forks with complex cases, but the technique I use on

a regular basis is this:

 

I heat two rocks (selected with intention), wrap them in terry cloth to protect

the patient from a burn, and have the patient rest their hands on them during

the regular treatment.  At the close of the treatment I take these rocks which

are now cooled sufficiently, and tap one agains the other down the shu points

and acrossed the shoulders to release any residual trapped energy.  Then I take

the rock used to tap the other one and slide it from GB20 to each shoulder and

down the shu points.  This is usually a smooth rock.

 

It has a nice closing effect.

 

My thoughts are that the frequency variables in any individual treatment are

likely beyond any authors or practitioners capacity and in reality, simple rocks

may be just as effective.  Why would the universe insist on an expensive and

complicated procedure to produce resonance?

 

I also have noted that many hemisync sound tracks are very similar to the sounds

of nature.  Spending an afternoon gardening in silence (accompanied with birds,

crickets, and the wind) is possibly just as effective to synchronize the

hemispheres as listening to a manufactured piece of music.

 

That is how I convinced myself that rocks are both grounding and sonic, and can

be  instruments in producing harmony.

 

Janis Egan

 

--- On Tue, 12/2/08, galenway <Galenway wrote:

 

galenway <Galenway

Re: Acutonics

Chinese Medicine

Tuesday, December 2, 2008, 6:14 PM

 

Jaimie-

 

I know this question has been discussed on this list before.

 

I've used them as a non-invasive way to treat for years. On one level they

are " poor-man's Ultrasound " , different frequencies harmonize and

affect different densities of tissue, especially useful with trigger-point

therapy. On another level they are a great way to stimulate acupoints, more than

pressure, less than needling. Those who practice Qi-Gung may find they are

useful tool to help develop other-body awareness, following the vibration in the

body of the pt has been great practice for myself as I learn to feel qi

distribution in others.

 

I've used them with massage and acupressure to great effect and they draw

the curious when done in public ( " Whatcha doing? " ) which gives an

opening to discuss the benefits of associated arts.

 

Great for Pediatrics, kids love 'em.

 

Be well,

 

Larry

 

Larry Moore

L.Ac, RN,BSN,MSOM

Scottsdale Arizona

602-931-2529

 

 

 

 

In a message dated 12/02/08 14:38:28 Mountain Standard Time, jwhartenby

writes:

Are they that scary?

 

-

 

Chinese Medicine

Tuesday, December 02, 2008 1:55 PM

RE: Acutonics

 

Run.

 

-Jason

 

Chinese Medicine

Chinese Medicine On Behalf Of

Whartenby!

Tuesday, December 02, 2008 12:19 PM

Chinese Medicine

Acutonics

 

Has anyone out there used tuning forks? If so, what do you think?

 

thanks,

Jamie

www.whartenby.com

Recent Activity

3New Members

Visit Your Group

Health

Asthma Triggers

How you can

identify them.

Meditation and

Lovingkindness

A Group

to share and learn.

Need traffic?

Drive customers

With search ads

on .

 

 

 

 

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Share on other sites

Jamie, and the group-

 

I agree there are lots of different opinions on different frequencies for

application. I have 28 forks that I have collected and experimented with over

the years and primarily use a low tone as a yin application to gently unravel

stagnant or excess energy (much as I would use gentle fingertip pressure over

said points) and higher tone to stimulate, tonify or more aggressively break

apart stuck Qi. Whether this has something to do with the longer lower energy

waves of a low tone (sounds that are more yin relative to yang) vs the higher

closer more energetic higher tone, or its simply the guide for my medical Qi

Gung, or whether it's all intension it seems to work for my patients.

 

I agree with Z'ev in that this is not necessarily a TCM technique, but then I

also use the vibrations of crystals and on occasion toning/chanting when the

patient is open to it, as well as my allopathic experiences. I admit to being a

pragmatist when it comes to energy therapies, I try to go with my (sometimes

limited) understanding of the principles behind the rituals or techniques and

apply them. Not suggesting it for everyone but it's how I grow in my art.

 

What I did was to purchase a simple set and explore on friends, pets and family

before trying them on patients. Definitely avoid the heads of infants (fragile

blood vessels) and directly over fresh trauma (used to be used as a check for

fractured bones, vibrate one end of the bone and would have pinpoint pain at the

break site) as well as other common sense guides. I don't mean to minimize the

power of this modality, but a wise teacher once told me that his teacher had

said he could not share the medicine he had taught him. He could only share what

of it he had made his own.

 

Be well,

 

Larry

 

 

 

 

In a message dated 12/03/08 09:48:41 Mountain Standard Time, janis3934

writes:

 

A couple years back I researched tuning fork treatments and found, as in all

treatment protocols, the frequency of different acupoints varied with the

protocol author. Tuning forks are not, in my opinion, a poor man's ultrasound

technique. Tuning forks are pricey! Tuning forks are effective demonstrators

of resonance, which restore energy to its original configuration.

 

On occasion I use my tuning forks with complex cases, but the technique I use on

a regular basis is this:

 

I heat two rocks (selected with intention), wrap them in terry cloth to protect

the patient from a burn, and have the patient rest their hands on them during

the regular treatment. At the close of the treatment I take these rocks which

are now cooled sufficiently, and tap one agains the other down the shu points

and acrossed the shoulders to release any residual trapped energy. Then I take

the rock used to tap the other one and slide it from GB20 to each shoulder and

down the shu points. This is usually a smooth rock.

 

It has a nice closing effect.

 

My thoughts are that the frequency variables in any individual treatment are

likely beyond any authors or practitioners capacity and in reality, simple rocks

may be just as effective. Why would the universe insist on an expensive and

complicated procedure to produce resonance?

 

I also have noted that many hemisync sound tracks are very similar to the sounds

of nature. Spending an afternoon gardening in silence (accompanied with birds,

crickets, and the wind) is possibly just as effective to synchronize the

hemispheres as listening to a manufactured piece of music.

 

That is how I convinced myself that rocks are both grounding and sonic, and can

be instruments in producing harmony.

 

Janis Egan

 

--- On Tue, 12/2/08, galenway <Galenway wrote:

 

galenway <Galenway

Re: Acutonics

Chinese Medicine

Tuesday, December 2, 2008, 6:14 PM

 

Jaimie-

 

I know this question has been discussed on this list before.

 

I've used them as a non-invasive way to treat for years. On one level they

are " poor-man's Ultrasound " , different frequencies harmonize and

affect different densities of tissue, especially useful with trigger-point

therapy. On another level they are a great way to stimulate acupoints, more than

pressure, less than needling. Those who practice Qi-Gung may find they are

useful tool to help develop other-body awareness, following the vibration in the

body of the pt has been great practice for myself as I learn to feel qi

distribution in others.

 

I've used them with massage and acupressure to great effect and they draw

the curious when done in public ( " Whatcha doing? " ) which gives an

opening to discuss the benefits of associated arts.

 

Great for Pediatrics, kids love 'em.

 

Be well,

 

Larry

 

Larry Moore

L.Ac, RN,BSN,MSOM

Scottsdale Arizona

602-931-2529

 

In a message dated 12/02/08 14:38:28 Mountain Standard Time, jwhartenby

writes:

Are they that scary?

 

-

 

Chinese Medicine

Tuesday, December 02, 2008 1:55 PM

RE: Acutonics

 

Run.

 

-Jason

 

Chinese Medicine

Chinese Medicine On Behalf Of

Whartenby!

Tuesday, December 02, 2008 12:19 PM

Chinese Medicine

Acutonics

 

Has anyone out there used tuning forks? If so, what do you think?

 

thanks,

Jamie

www.whartenby.com

Recent Activity

3New Members

Visit Your Group

Health

Asthma Triggers

How you can

identify them.

Meditation and

Lovingkindness

A Group

to share and learn.

Need traffic?

Drive customers

With search ads

on .

 

 

 

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