das habe im "innernet" gefunden:
Kinesiology
Kinesiology is primarily defined as the use of muscle testing to identify imbalances in the body's structural, chemical, emotional or other energy, to establish the body's priority healing needs, and to evaluate energy changes brought about by a broad spectrum of both manual and non-manual therapeutic procedures. It is a system of natural health care which combines muscle monitoring with the principles of Chinese medicine to assess energy and body function, applying a range of gentle yet powerful healing techniques to improve health, wellbeing and vitality.
The therapy
Like all natural therapies, holistic kinesiology aims to improve your health and wellbeing by stimulating your body's own healing potential. Holistic kinesiology is a very broad form of complementary medicine, encompassing many aspects of both Western and traditional medicine. Holistic kinesiologists are trained in the structural, emotional, nutritional, electromagnetic, energetic, metaphysical, physiological and psycho-spiritual areas of natural holographic healthcare.
In holistic kinesiology, virtually every area of complementary medicine is used, including acupressure, nutrition, chiropractic, blood and lymph reflexes, various forms of counselling, homoeopathy, traditional Tibetan and Indian medicine, reflexology, and aromatherapy. What is unique to kinesiology is the use of manual
muscle-monitoring feedback to provide understanding and an appropriate solution to the client's issue.
How does it work?
If you have used a mouse on a computer you'll know it allows you to access a great deal of information about that computer. With two buttons and the use of menus you can find out a lot about the computer. Muscle feedback is similar. Holistic kinesiologists monitor muscles to access the body's computer — the brain. Muscles are wired to the brain via the nervous system. The muscles act somewhat like the mouse on a computer. Certain muscles have been found to relate to specific acupuncture channels, organ and gland systems. For example, imbalances in certain muscles may indicate stress in liver function, others indicating stress in the digestive system.
It was discovered, for example, that clients who repeatedly had problems with the subscapularis, a muscle under the scapula in the back, often had a heart-related stress, such as heart disease or a heart channel-related stress. In the case of a heart channel stress, an acupoint on the heart channel may need to be stabilised or a heart-related emotion or issue may need to be addressed.
Muscle feedback is also used to find the cause of imbalances. For example, the therapist may monitor muscle feedback with your arm in a particular position by applying a small amount of pressure and find that it holds without effort. The practitioner then seeks to find the possible stressor, such as a particular emotion, food, chemical, toxin, etc, by seeing what stressor changes the muscle function.
The body even has its own menu systems, just like a computer. Acupressure, blood and lymph reflex points are particularly useful. So, for example, in the case of chronic fatigue, you may check if acupoints relating to specific parts of the liver, digestive and immune systems are active for your condition. Homoeopathic vials, aromatherapy oils, and flower essences may also be checked with muscle feedback to see if they are relevant for your particular condition. This natural feedback process allows a holistic kinesiologist to go underneath the conscious symptoms to isolate the causal factors. Muscle feedback is then used to guide the practitioner to the priority correction. There are hundreds of correction techniques from all areas of complementary medicine. Reflex zones or acupoints may be stimulated to correct an imbalance. For example, neuro-lymphatic reflexes may be rubbed to encourage the body's natural garbage disposal system (lymphatic system) and vascular reflexes held to improve blood flow to specific regions, organs or glands.
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