What a hoot…I use muscle checking in my work and love it’s simplicity, as the mind/body system is a very honest indicator of what is going on…but I never thought of this option. hmmm….
The dr’s that I work for have never and will never tell anyone to stop taking a medication that they were prescribed. They are just working with the body to add good nutrition and organic whole food supplements.
As an ND I use these methods within the rational of good common sense considering appropriate ddx and laboratory diagnosis. Most professionals that I know think this way. Dont worry we dont take someone with a BP of 200/100 off of meds based on muscle testing! We do this to see what treatments seem to agree best when we are trying to discern between 2 sound treatment options.
As the founder of a kinesiology system that has been taught in over 20 countries:
Kinesiology is a very fast way to find and correct energy imbalances.
I have seen traumas, including rape, corrected in ten minutes.
A lady with Rickets, after 15 operations, foot still splayed out 25 degrees, brought to normal in one week.
Chronic pain for ten years corrected in five minutes.
Massive improvements in MS, CFS, Myotonia, Mercury toxicity, Migraines etc.
Yet I still think what I do is weird!
Can we agree that Interpretation matters in lab work? A person can be in a so called ‘normal’ range but showing clinical symptoms which indicates a need for treatment. In the ‘standard of care’ approach by most doctors, many underlying issues get ignored. Its not that blood tests reveal too late.. its that many doctors fail in interpreting lab results correctly.. and mistakingly believe that a lab ‘within normal range’ somehow does not warrant treatment when clinically it does…
In a letter to me, the ICAK-USA executive board added that, “While there are numerous methods which employ manual muscle testing procedures, most are not in keeping with the standards of the ICAK . . . . Specifically . . . testing of substances by any method other than the stimulation of gustatory receptors on the tongue or olfactory receptors in the nose is specifically outside of the realm of applied kinesiology.”
The International College of Applied Kinesiology (ICAK) 1992 status statement:
Applied kinesiology procedures are not intended to be used as a single method of diagnosis. Applied kinesiology examination should enhance standard diagnosis, not replace it. . . .
because “blood work” is so “accurate”…it measures pathology and not dysfunction…besides the body will do anything to maintain homeostasis of the bloodstream..if you like tests that r specific and actually have some reason try saliva testing and hair analysis (companies that dont wash samples)…ive been around kinesiology for years and have seen thousands benefit by it…i would rather get my thyroid fixed before hypothyroidism sets in…cuz blood tests reveal that most of the time too late
Yep, I agree. Some drugs are toxic and and have side affects. And yes, Ayurveda and Chinese Medicine has been around a long time. So has naturopathic medicine, of which my wife is a licensed physician. There is a place for all, including kinesiology. That being said, when someone comes in to our clinic and says their ‘muscle tester’ said they had this or that, and blood tests say otherwise.. i’ll believe the blood tests. Believe me, it happens all too often. Get a second opinion.
Prescription drugs kill thousands of people a year…. the collateral damage from “side effects” which are toxic effects is substantial. Ayurveda and Chinese Medicine have been around for thousands of years and those “doctors” are much more successful helping people with degenerative diseases than MD’s. What do they have to offer? they practice heroic medicine – good for car accidents and gun shot wounds. They have no clue about auto-immune conditions, diabetes, cancer, etc
Until they advise someone to go off a med due to ‘muscle testing’ that ends up killing them. As the husband of a physician that is up against this kind of ‘testing’… I can assure you when it goes beyond nutrition, it borders on malpractice. So called medical intuitives are basically practicing medicine without a license doing this.
Does anyone know the folks who put this You Tube video together? Are they health care practitioners? If so, from where?
What a hoot…I use muscle checking in my work and love it’s simplicity, as the mind/body system is a very honest indicator of what is going on…but I never thought of this option. hmmm….
If only they were really like this……
The dr’s that I work for have never and will never tell anyone to stop taking a medication that they were prescribed. They are just working with the body to add good nutrition and organic whole food supplements.
Cool. Where did you graduate from? Bastyr? NCNM?
As an ND I use these methods within the rational of good common sense considering appropriate ddx and laboratory diagnosis. Most professionals that I know think this way. Dont worry we dont take someone with a BP of 200/100 off of meds based on muscle testing! We do this to see what treatments seem to agree best when we are trying to discern between 2 sound treatment options.
As the founder of a kinesiology system that has been taught in over 20 countries:
Kinesiology is a very fast way to find and correct energy imbalances.
I have seen traumas, including rape, corrected in ten minutes.
A lady with Rickets, after 15 operations, foot still splayed out 25 degrees, brought to normal in one week.
Chronic pain for ten years corrected in five minutes.
Massive improvements in MS, CFS, Myotonia, Mercury toxicity, Migraines etc.
Yet I still think what I do is weird!
love and peace
Can we agree that Interpretation matters in lab work? A person can be in a so called ‘normal’ range but showing clinical symptoms which indicates a need for treatment. In the ‘standard of care’ approach by most doctors, many underlying issues get ignored. Its not that blood tests reveal too late.. its that many doctors fail in interpreting lab results correctly.. and mistakingly believe that a lab ‘within normal range’ somehow does not warrant treatment when clinically it does…
In a letter to me, the ICAK-USA executive board added that, “While there are numerous methods which employ manual muscle testing procedures, most are not in keeping with the standards of the ICAK . . . . Specifically . . . testing of substances by any method other than the stimulation of gustatory receptors on the tongue or olfactory receptors in the nose is specifically outside of the realm of applied kinesiology.”
The International College of Applied Kinesiology (ICAK) 1992 status statement:
Applied kinesiology procedures are not intended to be used as a single method of diagnosis. Applied kinesiology examination should enhance standard diagnosis, not replace it. . . .
.
Please tell me again your education licensing?
because “blood work” is so “accurate”…it measures pathology and not dysfunction…besides the body will do anything to maintain homeostasis of the bloodstream..if you like tests that r specific and actually have some reason try saliva testing and hair analysis (companies that dont wash samples)…ive been around kinesiology for years and have seen thousands benefit by it…i would rather get my thyroid fixed before hypothyroidism sets in…cuz blood tests reveal that most of the time too late
Muscle-testing for cars. AWESOME.
Yep, I agree. Some drugs are toxic and and have side affects. And yes, Ayurveda and Chinese Medicine has been around a long time. So has naturopathic medicine, of which my wife is a licensed physician. There is a place for all, including kinesiology. That being said, when someone comes in to our clinic and says their ‘muscle tester’ said they had this or that, and blood tests say otherwise.. i’ll believe the blood tests. Believe me, it happens all too often. Get a second opinion.
Prescription drugs kill thousands of people a year…. the collateral damage from “side effects” which are toxic effects is substantial. Ayurveda and Chinese Medicine have been around for thousands of years and those “doctors” are much more successful helping people with degenerative diseases than MD’s. What do they have to offer? they practice heroic medicine – good for car accidents and gun shot wounds. They have no clue about auto-immune conditions, diabetes, cancer, etc
Until they advise someone to go off a med due to ‘muscle testing’ that ends up killing them. As the husband of a physician that is up against this kind of ‘testing’… I can assure you when it goes beyond nutrition, it borders on malpractice. So called medical intuitives are basically practicing medicine without a license doing this.
sweet
Thanks for the great idea!
This is a howl!!!
As a homeopath I think this video is hysterical. Ha Ha!!
Neither – it’s just funny x
LOL for ten seconds.
good question, my chiro’s that I work for are doing this sort of nutrition response testing and it has been very effective in helping people.
I don’t get if Mercola is pro or against this?
NICE!