Anonymous ID: c091aa June 22, 2019, 11:06 a.m. No.6817040   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7060 >>7062 >>7092 >>7162

>>6816368 (lb)

>>6816386 (lb)

You don't, really…

I think I'm the only one who sees things the way I do.

Others are close:

OG/ holistic chiros believe a bone moves out of place but don't understand fascia can be too, and they don't know that the tenderness one feels when a sore "spot" is poked can be used as a guage to calculate misdirection for repositioning purposes.

Acupuncturists affect meridians (the fascial tracts) with good success, but it's a "reset the system to clear the blocked energy" approach (I believe); they don't see it as an out-of-place sensor and or twisted/tangled string being responsible for the blockage.

Others recognize this system of fascial tracts and some even understand that they twist, but I just don't think anyone's put it all together as a complete mapping system or fully understood what that means, so they can't do with it what I can do; and NO ONE has yet to understand that the pain one feels is the…. let's call it subconscious mind's way of compelling the person to carry out an action that fixes the REAL problem, usually nearby but NOT where one feels the pain, without even realizing they're doing it. Sounds Crazy I know… let me try to give an example:

You have neck pain. You rub it a certain way and tilt your head a certain way while doing it. What you don't realize is there is always a second point of contact taking place you aren't even aware of, and this second point of contact is not only touching the hidden, out-of-position sensor, but the way you're rubbing is such that it's being put back into position. In the neck example, the palm of the hand is ever-so-lightly touching a spot on the side of the neck just a bit forward of midline.

It may be that the whole thing is hidden from the conscious mind BECAUSE THE REAL SPOT AT ISSUE IS EXCRUCIATINGLY tender to the touch, and if we were aware of it we wouldn't have the balls to fix it consciously.

So what I do… from experience and watching the person I guess where these spots are, I press on them, I press into 4 different directions very lightly (though it doesn't feel that way) to calculate the misdirection (2 most tender gives trajectory) and then I push it back the other way. On a more advanced level you throw in rotation of the string to untwist.

If you tell me what hurts maybe I can help you fix yourself if you want.