Guest guest Posted August 10, 2006 Report Share Posted August 10, 2006 Does anyone here know anything about muscle testing, diagnostic energy work? Thing is: I had gotten what I thought were cold sores (NEVER in my life had i EVER had one), I called my herbalist, she thought maybe they were kanker sores . I went to see her today and she decided to muscle test me. It was Astonishing. I even tried to intervene, but it did not work! My body knew the answers. I wanted to talk to her about it, ask her everything she was doing and how she/where she learned it, but the shop filled with people (WONDERFUL woman). So, here I am, asking all of you what you know of it, how it works, why it works, how accurate it is if it does turn out to be what she said it was . Strep infection, she thinks, 1600mg Echinacea/Goldenseal 4x/day for four days. (4x4x4x4=?wow?) Where can I learn more about it??? Also , does anyone have any advice for a school to go to for holistic/naturopathic/homeopathic/herbal healing? My teacher recommended Clayton Colleg of Natural Healing, but if anyone else knows of a stellar degree program, send me some info. thank you in advance Namaste jesica massage prectitioner and therapeutic bodyworker Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2006 Report Share Posted August 11, 2006 Jesica, My nutritionist did that muscle testing on me to see what my body needed. She did a test where she had me answer the question " what is your name? " twice. The first time I was to say my real name, and the second time I was to lie and reply with her name. I was so blown away, I could not believe it. I tried with all my might to keep my arm up when I lied, and she literally could have pushed it down with her pinky, I was helpless! So, I know exactly what you mean. Next time I get any offers on workshops for muscle testing I am going to take it. I had just gone to a Sacred Powers Workshop, and did not have any more money last time it was offered plus I did not know what it was. I thought I would have to buy equipment and I blew it off. Now if I ever get a second chance to go to one of those I am taking the course too. Much love, Lorain cre8ive1978 <cre8ive1978 2006/08/09 Wed PM 08:39:16 CDT Muscle Testing Does anyone here know anything about muscle testing, diagnostic energy work? Thing is: I had gotten what I thought were cold sores (NEVER in my life had i EVER had one), I called my herbalist, she thought maybe they were kanker sores . I went to see her today and she decided to muscle test me. It was Astonishing. I even tried to intervene, but it did not work! My body knew the answers. I wanted to talk to her about it, ask her everything she was doing and how she/where she learned it, but the shop filled with people (WONDERFUL woman). So, here I am, asking all of you what you know of it, how it works, why it works, how accurate it is if it does turn out to be what she said it was . Strep infection, she thinks, 1600mg Echinacea/Goldenseal 4x/day for four days. (4x4x4x4=?wow?) Where can I learn more about it??? Also , does anyone have any advice for a school to go to for holistic/naturopathic/homeopathic/herbal healing? My teacher recommended Clayton Colleg of Natural Healing, but if anyone else knows of a stellar degree program, send me some info. thank you in advance Namaste jesica massage prectitioner and therapeutic bodyworker Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2006 Report Share Posted August 12, 2006 Many people harness this same reflex by pendulum dowsing or the 'stick pad' used in Radionics. I regard this as non-verbal communication with the body itself. You can google the terms " abdominal brain " , " Enteric Nervous System " , or " ideomotor action " . I have something about this on my page at mystical-wonders.com but I'm about to re-do that page as a sort of news portal so I'll repost it here: " The " Abdominal Brain " Key to PSI powers? Byron Robinson, M.D., a well respected physician and researcher of that era, exemplifies the position that the abdomen contains a secondary brain. In mammals there exist two brains of almost equal importance to the individual and race. One is the cranial brain, the instrument of volitions, of mental progress and physical protection. The other is the abdominal brain, the instrument of vascular and visceral function. It is the automatic, vegetative, the subconscious brain of physical existence. In the cranial brain resides the consciousness of right and wrong. Here is the seat of all progress, mental and moral ... However, in the abdomen there exists a brain of wonderful power maintaining eternal, restless vigilance over its viscera. It presides over organic life. It dominates the rhythmical function of viscera....The abdominal brain is a receiver, a reorganizer, an emitter of nerve forces. It has the power of a brain. It is a reflex center in health and disease.... The abdominal brain is not a mere agent of the [cerebral] brain and cord; it receives and generates nerve forces itself; it presides over nutrition. It is the center of life itself. In it are repeated all the physiologic and pathologic manifestations of visceral function (rhythm, absorption, secretion, and nutrition). The abdominal brain can live without the cranial brain, which is demonstrated by living children being born without cerebrospinal axis. On the contrary the cranial brain can not live without the abdominal brain.... (Byron Robinson, 1907, 123 - 126) Robinson was not alone in his fascination with the nervous system of the abdomen. At about the same time that Robinson was discovering the abdominal brain, British physiologist Johannis Langley of Cambridge University recognized that: ... the ganglia of the gut do more than simply relay and distribute information from the cephalic [cerebral] brain. He was unable to reconcile conceptually the great disparity between the 2 X 10 (8) neurons in the gut and the few hundred vagus fibers from the big brain, other than to suggest that the nervous system of the gut was capable of integrative functions independent of the central nervous system. (Wood, 1994, p. 424) Langley labeled the brain in the gut the enteric nervous system (ENS). Although for several decades Robinson and Langley's work has been ignored, modern medical research has finally rediscovered the abdominal brain with its enteric nervous system. In fact, research on the nerve connections in the abdomen is one of the " hot " areas of medical research. To a considerable extent, the new interest in exploring the ENS has come from the realization that both the ENS and the remainder of the autonomic nervous system are richly endowed with neurotransmitters and neuromodulators. Many substances are found in both the bowel and the brain, a coincidence that strikes most observers as intrinsically interesting, if not immediately explicable. (Gershon, Kirchgessner & Wade, 1994, p. 386) The similarity between the structure of the ENS and that of the brain, combined with the ability of the ENS to mediate relatively simple behaviors, suggests that general principles can be derived from studies of the ENS that will eventually be applicable to the CNS. Given the unique position of the ENS as the only peripheral system capable of autonomous function, it seems more likely that such principles will emerge from investigations of the ENS than from studies of other aggregates of peripheral ganglia. The parallel between the bowel and the brain also suggests that newly discovered principles of central neural function may find applicability in studies of the ENS, in a sort of reverse form of reductionism whereby the brain serves as a model for the gut. (Gershon, Kirchgessner & Wade, 1994, p. 414) In addition to the biochemical and structural similarities between the cerebral brain and the abdominal brain, contemporary researchers are drawing computer analogies and using information processing models to describe the relationship between the brains of the body. The cephalic [cerebral] brain communicates with the smaller brain in the gut in a manner analogous to that of interactive communication between networked computers. Primary sensory afferents and extensions of intramural neurons in the gut carry information to the central nervous system. Information is transmitted from the brain to the enteric nervous system over sympathetic and parasympathetic pathways. This, however, represents only one kind of input of an integrative network that also contains microcircuitry for processing information from a variety of sensory receptors along the digestive tract, as well as synaptic circuits that generate programmed patterns of neural outflow to the effector systems. Input to enteric ganglion cells is not exclusively from the central nervous system as once thought, and the old habit of referring to the neurons of the enteric nervous system as postganglionic neurons has become outmoded and abandoned. The current concept of the enteric nervous system is that of a minibrain placed in close proximity to the effector systems it controls. Rather than crowding the hundred million neurons required for control of the gut into the cranial cavity as part of the cephalic brain, and transmitting signals over long-unreliable pathways, natural selection placed the integrative microcircuits at the site of the effectors. The circuits at the effector sites have evolved as an organized network of different kinds of neurons interconnected by chemical syna**. (Wood, 1994, p. 424) " If you're intrigued by this stuff you can read " Your Body Doesn't Lie " for a kinesiologist's perspective that does not use the abdominal brain angle. , <TheKoolLottes wrote: > > Jesica, > > My nutritionist did that muscle testing on me to see what my body needed. She did a test where she had me answer the question " what is your name? " twice. The first time I was to say my real name, and the second time I was to lie and reply with her name. I was so blown away, I could not believe it. I tried with all my might to keep my arm up when I lied, and she literally could have pushed it down with her pinky, I was helpless! > > So, I know exactly what you mean. Next time I get any offers on workshops for muscle testing I am going to take it. I had just gone to a Sacred Powers Workshop, and did not have any more money last time it was offered plus I did not know what it was. I thought I would have to buy equipment and I blew it off. Now if I ever get a second chance to go to one of those I am taking the course too. > > Much love, > Lorain > > cre8ive1978 <cre8ive1978 > 2006/08/09 Wed PM 08:39:16 CDT > > Muscle Testing > > > Does anyone here know anything about muscle testing, diagnostic energy > work? > > Thing is: I had gotten what I thought were cold sores (NEVER in my > life had i EVER had one), I called my herbalist, she thought maybe > they were kanker sores . I went to see her today and she decided to > muscle test me. It was Astonishing. I even tried to intervene, but > it did not work! My body knew the answers. I wanted to talk to her > about it, ask her everything she was doing and how she/where she > learned it, but the shop filled with people (WONDERFUL woman). > > So, here I am, asking all of you what you know of it, how it works, > why it works, how accurate it is if it does turn out to be what she > said it was . Strep infection, she thinks, 1600mg > Echinacea/Goldenseal 4x/day for four days. (4x4x4x4=?wow?) Where can > I learn more about it??? > > Also , does anyone have any advice for a school to go to for > holistic/naturopathic/homeopathic/herbal healing? My Chinese Medicine > teacher recommended Clayton Colleg of Natural Healing, but if anyone > else knows of a stellar degree program, send me some info. > > thank you in advance > > Namaste > > jesica > massage prectitioner and therapeutic bodyworker > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2006 Report Share Posted August 12, 2006 I have a book called Energy Medicine by Donna Eden It covers how to do muscle testing (energy testing). It takes you step by step in through the procedure. I haven't read that far yet. But it's an excellent book. Hugs and Prayers, Linda cre8ive1978 <cre8ive1978 wrote: Does anyone here know anything about muscle testing, diagnostic energy work? Thing is: I had gotten what I thought were cold sores (NEVER in my life had i EVER had one), I called my herbalist, she thought maybe they were kanker sores . I went to see her today and she decided to muscle test me. It was Astonishing. I even tried to intervene, but it did not work! My body knew the answers. I wanted to talk to her about it, ask her everything she was doing and how she/where she learned it, but the shop filled with people (WONDERFUL woman). So, here I am, asking all of you what you know of it, how it works, why it works, how accurate it is if it does turn out to be what she said it was . Strep infection, she thinks, 1600mg Echinacea/Goldenseal 4x/day for four days. (4x4x4x4=?wow?) Where can I learn more about it??? Also , does anyone have any advice for a school to go to for holistic/naturopathic/homeopathic/herbal healing? My teacher recommended Clayton Colleg of Natural Healing, but if anyone else knows of a stellar degree program, send me some info. thank you in advance Namaste jesica massage prectitioner and therapeutic bodyworker Get on board. You're invited to try the new Mail Beta. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2006 Report Share Posted August 12, 2006 THe muscle test you are talking about is called Kinesiology, it is 100 % acurate if you know how to apply it. You can learn more about it if you research metaphisics topis. The man that turned kinesiology into a science is called Dr. David R. Hawkins, MD, PhD He plubished several books and the best book to read about it is called Power vs Force. It teaches you to calibrate vibrations of people, things etc... using the muscle test. However, in order to read about metaphiscs and understand, research and develop spirituality based on spiritual laws you have to start when you are ready. How do you know you are ready? Try starting reaseach and if you feel pasionate about it. You are there! ready to start a new wonderful world and open a new path in your life that you never thought it could exist. Good luck, I hope you find the path you already started! Teresa -- In , <TheKoolLottes wrote: > > Jesica, > > My nutritionist did that muscle testing on me to see what my body needed. She did a test where she had me answer the question " what is your name? " twice. The first time I was to say my real name, and the second time I was to lie and reply with her name. I was so blown away, I could not believe it. I tried with all my might to keep my arm up when I lied, and she literally could have pushed it down with her pinky, I was helpless! > > So, I know exactly what you mean. Next time I get any offers on workshops for muscle testing I am going to take it. I had just gone to a Sacred Powers Workshop, and did not have any more money last time it was offered plus I did not know what it was. I thought I would have to buy equipment and I blew it off. Now if I ever get a second chance to go to one of those I am taking the course too. > > Much love, > Lorain > > cre8ive1978 <cre8ive1978 > 2006/08/09 Wed PM 08:39:16 CDT > > Muscle Testing > > > Does anyone here know anything about muscle testing, diagnostic energy > work? > > Thing is: I had gotten what I thought were cold sores (NEVER in my > life had i EVER had one), I called my herbalist, she thought maybe > they were kanker sores . I went to see her today and she decided to > muscle test me. It was Astonishing. I even tried to intervene, but > it did not work! My body knew the answers. I wanted to talk to her > about it, ask her everything she was doing and how she/where she > learned it, but the shop filled with people (WONDERFUL woman). > > So, here I am, asking all of you what you know of it, how it works, > why it works, how accurate it is if it does turn out to be what she > said it was . Strep infection, she thinks, 1600mg > Echinacea/Goldenseal 4x/day for four days. (4x4x4x4=?wow?) Where can > I learn more about it??? > > Also , does anyone have any advice for a school to go to for > holistic/naturopathic/homeopathic/herbal healing? My Chinese Medicine > teacher recommended Clayton Colleg of Natural Healing, but if anyone > else knows of a stellar degree program, send me some info. > > thank you in advance > > Namaste > > jesica > massage prectitioner and therapeutic bodyworker > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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