Guest guest Posted January 9, 2009 Report Share Posted January 9, 2009 I'd love more info on how to do this one!--- On Fri, 1/9/09, docspeed2001 <docspeed2001 wrote: docspeed2001 <docspeed2001 How a doorjamb became my chiropractor Date: Friday, January 9, 2009, 1:37 AM I put out my lower back about 2 weeks ago.I did my normal self-help drills with the hot spa and then the chair. It would not go back into place.Research has shown that one slightly touched spinal nerve...with the touch of a small feather falling on it, can cause up to 50% of that nerve's function to be lost.And that nerve touch can then adversely affect the complex role of the vertebral motor unit; consisting of bones, muscles, ligaments, blood vessels and nerves.And when little time has passed and treatment is sought early relatively little treatment is required because the compensations will not have had time to deeply imbed themselves structurally.So I went to the chiropractor. I told him, showed him, and touched where the subluxation was, and the line of pain.After 45 minutes the pain was worse...and he's a great doctor and did his best. He just couldn't get it in.Then I went out for breakfast, and while eating breakfast I gave my subconscious mind instructions to find a `fix' for the situation.I went back to the office, and while unlocking the outer door I remembered a time when I had a rib out in Elmer City WA, and how a busy chiropractor had shown me how to put it back in WITHOUT needing anyone else.It was with the use of a doorjamb. And it took him about 45 seconds to show me how to do it for myself. It had been about 18 years ago.So I used the doorjamb, and those vertebrae popped right back into place, on both sides of the spine.Group, I wonder what this post is about?John La Tourrette, PhD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2009 Report Share Posted January 10, 2009 healingenergies- essentialskills , " docspeed2001 " <docspeed2001 wrote: > > I put out my lower back about 2 weeks ago. Been there, done that Once it happened 2-3 times a year but my last chiropractor got me in good shape. I have done my back stretches religiously every morning for years. Now, I do my Donna drills straight after. And another chiropractor told me to stop doing a stretch that a physical therapist had recommended and that had caused the back issue on a couple of occasions > I did my normal self-help drills with the hot spa and then the chair. Your first stop is self-help. Great (Is the chair drill in the archives?) > > It would not go back into place. > > Research has shown that one slightly touched spinal nerve...with the > touch of a small feather falling on it, can cause up to 50% of that > nerve's function to be lost. > > And that nerve touch can then adversely affect the complex role of > the vertebral motor unit; consisting of bones, muscles, ligaments, > blood vessels and nerves. > > And when little time has passed and treatment is sought early > relatively little treatment is required because the compensations > will not have had time to deeply imbed themselves structurally. > > So I went to the chiropractor. I told him, showed him, and touched > where the subluxation was, and the line of pain. > So your initial self-help didn't work but so you sought professional help straight away. Smart move (My chiropractor told me a similar story) > After 45 minutes the pain was worse...and he's a great doctor and did > his best. He just couldn't get it in. > > Then I went out for breakfast, and while eating breakfast I gave my > subconscious mind instructions to find a `fix' for the situation. > Most of us have heard the story of your broken back so you have a solid belief system that you will get a fix and that it will work. Now you did this " while eating breakfast " – can you clarify were you in Hakalau or just normal consciousness or is there anything else about how you gave those instructions that is significant? > I went back to the office, and while unlocking the outer door I > remembered a time when I had a rib out in Elmer City WA, and how a > busy chiropractor had shown me how to put it back in WITHOUT needing > anyone else. > > It was with the use of a doorjamb. As you used the door for one purpose, it triggered the idea to use it for another - cool > And it took him about 45 seconds to show me how to do it for myself. > > It had been about 18 years ago. > > So I used the doorjamb, and those vertebrae popped right back into > place, on both sides of the spine. I could use the details of this too > > Group, I wonder what this post is about? My take is... Self reliance Taking responsibility for the fix and knowing when, where and how to get help Including using professional help, and your subconscious Thanks for an interesting post Vince Melling > John La Tourrette, PhD > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2009 Report Share Posted January 10, 2009 Yes please...tell us how to do it. What do you guys think of the Zero Point laser for fixing subluxations? I am considering getting one. , Beatrice Lague <b_lague wrote: > > I'd love more info on how to do this one! > > --- On Fri, 1/9/09, docspeed2001 <docspeed2001 wrote: > > docspeed2001 <docspeed2001 > How a doorjamb became my chiropractor > > Friday, January 9, 2009, 1:37 AM I put out my lower back about 2 weeks ago. > > I did my normal self-help drills with the hot spa and then the chair. > > It would not go back into place. > > Research has shown that one slightly touched spinal nerve...with the > touch of a small feather falling on it, can cause up to 50% of that > nerve's function to be lost. > > And that nerve touch can then adversely affect the complex role of > the vertebral motor unit; consisting of bones, muscles, ligaments, > blood vessels and nerves. > > And when little time has passed and treatment is sought early > relatively little treatment is required because the compensations > will not have had time to deeply imbed themselves structurally. > > So I went to the chiropractor. I told him, showed him, and touched > where the subluxation was, and the line of pain. > > After 45 minutes the pain was worse...and he's a great doctor and did > his best. He just couldn't get it in. > > Then I went out for breakfast, and while eating breakfast I gave my > subconscious mind instructions to find a `fix' for the situation. > > I went back to the office, and while unlocking the outer door I > remembered a time when I had a rib out in Elmer City WA, and how a > busy chiropractor had shown me how to put it back in WITHOUT needing > anyone else. > > It was with the use of a doorjamb. > > And it took him about 45 seconds to show me how to do it for myself. > > It had been about 18 years ago. > > So I used the doorjamb, and those vertebrae popped right back into > place, on both sides of the spine. > > Group, I wonder what this post is about? > > John La Tourrette, PhD > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2009 Report Share Posted January 10, 2009 Doc - You used a series of problem solving methods that went back and forth in time, and different states: 1) The first tried and true (hot spa, and then RV.) But, not enough. You didn't want the injury to set in (future paced the injury), so you went to a pro. It must have been pretty painful, because you were concerned and you couldn't fix it quickly. The chiro couldn't fix it either. (Sometimes an injury causes a lock down around the site, more inflammation and unconscious resistance by your body to protect the injured area. The bone won't move!) You went to eat (change of state), gave your unconscious mind an instruction. When you went home --- at the door -- the door triggered a memory of what worked before. The door jam! It worked before, successfully. Your body remembered that success. Congruence -- and your body released the trigger on the nerve. Helen > I put out my lower back about 2 weeks ago. > > I did my normal self-help drills with the hot spa and then the chair. > > It would not go back into place. > > Research has shown that one slightly touched spinal nerve...with the > touch of a small feather falling on it, can cause up to 50% of that > nerve's function to be lost. > > And that nerve touch can then adversely affect the complex role of > the vertebral motor unit; consisting of bones, muscles, ligaments, > blood vessels and nerves. > > And when little time has passed and treatment is sought early > relatively little treatment is required because the compensations > will not have had time to deeply imbed themselves structurally. > > So I went to the chiropractor. I told him, showed him, and touched > where the subluxation was, and the line of pain. > > After 45 minutes the pain was worse...and he's a great doctor and did > his best. He just couldn't get it in. > > Then I went out for breakfast, and while eating breakfast I gave my > subconscious mind instructions to find a `fix' for the situation. > > I went back to the office, and while unlocking the outer door I > remembered a time when I had a rib out in Elmer City WA, and how a > busy chiropractor had shown me how to put it back in WITHOUT needing > anyone else. > > It was with the use of a doorjamb. > > And it took him about 45 seconds to show me how to do it for myself. > > It had been about 18 years ago. > > So I used the doorjamb, and those vertebrae popped right back into > place, on both sides of the spine. > > Group, I wonder what this post is about? > > John La Tourrette, PhD > > > > > --- > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2009 Report Share Posted January 11, 2009 Hi Doc Group This email is about How to give the right instructions To the subconscious Listening Believing Doing Voila DONE A Kahuna work Orna ‘’ Then I went out for breakfast, and while eating breakfast I gave my subconscious mind instructions to find a `fix' for the situation.’’ On Behalf Of docspeed2001 Friday, January 09, 2009 8:38 AM How a doorjamb became my chiropractor I put out my lower back about 2 weeks ago. I did my normal self-help drills with the hot spa and then the chair. It would not go back into place. Research has shown that one slightly touched spinal nerve...with the touch of a small feather falling on it, can cause up to 50% of that nerve's function to be lost. And that nerve touch can then adversely affect the complex role of the vertebral motor unit; consisting of bones, muscles, ligaments, blood vessels and nerves. And when little time has passed and treatment is sought early relatively little treatment is required because the compensations will not have had time to deeply imbed themselves structurally. So I went to the chiropractor. I told him, showed him, and touched where the subluxation was, and the line of pain. After 45 minutes the pain was worse...and he's a great doctor and did his best. He just couldn't get it in. Then I went out for breakfast, and while eating breakfast I gave my subconscious mind instructions to find a `fix' for the situation. I went back to the office, and while unlocking the outer door I remembered a time when I had a rib out in Elmer City WA, and how a busy chiropractor had shown me how to put it back in WITHOUT needing anyone else. It was with the use of a doorjamb. And it took him about 45 seconds to show me how to do it for myself. It had been about 18 years ago. So I used the doorjamb, and those vertebrae popped right back into place, on both sides of the spine. Group, I wonder what this post is about? John La Tourrette, PhD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2009 Report Share Posted January 11, 2009 > Then I went out for breakfast, and while eating breakfast I gave my > subconscious mind instructions to find a `fix' for the situation. > > I went back to the office, and while unlocking the outer door I > remembered a time when I had a rib out in Elmer City WA, and how a > busy chiropractor had shown me how to put it back in WITHOUT needing > anyone else. > > It was with the use of a doorjamb. > > And it took him about 45 seconds to show me how to do it for myself. > > It had been about 18 years ago. > > So I used the doorjamb, and those vertebrae popped right back into > place, on both sides of the spine. > > Group, I wonder what this post is about? > > John La Tourrette, PhD > Your post is obviously about the magical properties of doors. They can be more effective than professionals with many years experience and training. It's about opening the *right doors of perception* by setting your intention to fix a problem and then giving your subconscious the instructions to find that information (by going to level, then picturing the desired end result) I think the mechanism is this - Firstly human conscious attention is limited to about 5 or 7 things. Secondly the human memory contains an almost unlimited store of memories. Thirdly, even though the human mind contains all these memories, they cannot always be retrieved at will. That is because they are accessible only by accessing a thought or memory that is connected by association. Fourthly, in our everyday existence, we encounter a vast amount of sensory data, much of which we do not notice. The process of intention keeps the mind focused on the imagination of the end result. Memories are also perceptions that are activated through connected thought. The imagination of the desired process/end result stimulates connected memories. Picturing the end result also keeps a pattern in mind that can be matched against new experiences, making you notice similar things in your everyday experience. So the process massively increases the possiblility of finding a solution either through a) Memory retreival, or b) Noticing something in your environment c) And the process of *intention* can direct you through your actions towards the imagined picture on top of that. So the process that doc described can find a solution through all of a), b) and c) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2009 Report Share Posted January 11, 2009 And an important part of going to the chiropractor is to 'satisfy' your conscious part. Without doing that, the conscious part could well sabotage the work done by the subconscious. René Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 12, 2009 Report Share Posted January 12, 2009 Doc said, > So I used the doorjamb, and those vertebrae popped right back into > place, on both sides of the spine. > > Group, I wonder what this post is about? > > John La Tourrette, PhD This is another awesome example of complete Self Response-Ability. You sought out the help of your chiro who wasn't able to deliver in this instance. Then you instructed your sub-conscious to find the solution. When you were sufficiently relaxed at meal time, your answer came through. I'm glad you are feeling alot better now! Melissa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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