Anonymous ID: b14b31 June 22, 2019, 8:38 a.m. No.6815762   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>6368 >>6386

>>6815680

above my pay grade, but I can say this:

I untwist fascial "tracts" if you will to 'put things back where they belong' and it stops pains people go into early retirement for. That only makes SENSE if sensors are telling us about position within tight spaces. Someone who's seen my work has also seen the Toftness "radiation detector" in use, and he said the moment of things 'being in place' in my work corresponds perfectly with the detector readings when things are in place with the Toftness work; when things are in place, the signal shuts off. When they're not in place, the signal is picked up.

My theory:

take a string or wire and start twisting it. Notice what happens. First it gets shorter, then it starts to fold on itself; first secondary formations, then tertiary, then quaternary… since fascia is connected to everything, what is this going to do to tubes? will it start to occlude things?