Coaching Session For Healers

How to Establish Communication with the Innate Intelligence of the Body

October 1 2014 Freddie Ulan
Coaching Session For Healers
How to Establish Communication with the Innate Intelligence of the Body
October 1 2014 Freddie Ulan

0 A PUBLICATION OF ULAN NUTRITIONAL SYSTEMS, INC. How You Can Achieve Your Full Capacity as a Healer Coaching Session for Healers If we follow the medical model, we compare our educated intelligence with that of the patient and come up with a diagnosis.This routinely fails! At best, we succeed in bypassing his nervous system and changing his symptoms. Muscle testing can be extremely accurate, but earlier systems were too complex, too time-consuming to perform in any volume, and too inconsistent in their results. We've changed all that. The system I'm about to show you assesses the patient's body, its innate intelligence, and the autonomic nervous system (ANS)—all that makes the patient's body work. Continued on page 2 "Muscle testing can be extremely accurate, but earlier systems were too complex, too time-consuming to perform in any volume, and too inconsistent in their results. We've changed all that." —Freddie Ulan, DC, CCN 1 5 Coaching Session How to Establish Communication with the Innate Intelligence of the Body Freddie Ulan, DC, CCN Dynamics of Healing Restore Energy by Unsticking a Stuck Autonomic Nervous System Freddie Ulan, DC, CCN Have questions? Call us at (866)418-4801 or email us at info@ unsinc.info. Continued from page I Imagine it as playing a piano. When you hit the key, it doesn't just keep going—it hits a solid surface after going down about half an inch.That's what you're looking for, and what you want to do is increase the pressure on a gradient until you are sure you have a lock. When I'm working with a doctor who is having trouble muscle testing, I usually find out he doesn't get a lock. People get confused because they think that they're testing muscle strength. It's very solid when they lock.That doesn't mean I can do chin-ups on the arm [pictured] without overwhelming it! Make sure you have two arms that lock.Why? Because when you start finding things that go weak, and the arm goes down, the patient might say,"Oh, I'm just getting tired in that arm." So you can go to the other arm and say, "Well, let's see how it is on this side that's been resting." When it really is weak, it will be weak on both sides. It's a neurological thing. They try to overcome that lack of neurological integrity by pulling in the trapezius, the latissimus, their neck muscles. People have literally thrown out their low back trying to prevent an arm from going down. While this is the most important basic, basic, basic, it's also the thing that comes up on the most advanced level when I'm working with a doctor who is having trouble. I find out,"Oh my God, he doesn't get a lock." I take him aside discreetly and explain,"You're not muscle testing! That's why you're having trouble muscle testing. In order to muscle test, you actually have to do the muscle test." That's the most important piece of muscle testing technology I can give you because without that, nothing works. I always recommend testing two muscles so that in the middle of the session, you have a spare muscle in case you need it. "Regulation" refers to the ability of the autonomic nervous system to up-regulate or down-regulate Sympathetic and Parasympathetic tone depending upon the needs of the body. Find the belly button, and—get the center of the palm, with the hand curled back; it's a very light contact, you're just looking for electrical field, not particularly pressure. So, light contact and the arm should go down if regulation is open. Most of the time, it is. "Switching" refers to an Autonomic Nervous System in the state of confusion or dys-regulation. We put the patient's pinkie and thumb tips together, and check a strong arm, then straighten the hand and test again. I generally test like this: the frontal part of the brain [pictured], then top part of the brain, then the crown, and finally the cerebellum. If the patient has neck symptoms, I'll check each bone one at a time to see if there's anything connecting with the spinal segment. I'll check the frontal sinuses by putting a little pressure on the sinuses. Check the maxillary sinuses, and check the upper and lower jaw. Infections and metals in the jaw may be affecting the rest of the body.Then I check the tonsil area, where a lot of people with chronic immune problems have stuff accumulating. The thyroid is shaped like a little bow tie. You can also check the parathyroids that are in the upper and lower quarters of the bow tie. If I had someone who's coughing, I could put my hand over their lung in various spots and also on their back.You can check the apex of the lungs [pictured] and meridians one and two which are right above the lung. You don't even have to be that specific, if you just put a few fingers in where the humerus meets the chest, you will be picking up one or more lung meridians right there. You can put a little pressure, and it doesn't matter if you use the front or the back of the hand, because in this test we are putting pressure, putting a little stress on the dermatome [neurological area connected to the underlying organs]. If the underlying organ is having problems, that extra stress on the dermatome will cause the body to down-regulate and you get a weakness. It doesn't matter whether it's my hand or her hand, but it is a gentle pressure. You can have them put their own hand on their heart. And one way or the other you can check that heart. I like to check the hearts directly because it reminds me that some of these women are suffering from the underwire bra, the "dress to kill" syndrome. Sometimes when you test a heart, you find weakness but also a piece of wire there, and then you have to get the bra out of the way and test the heart without the wire being there, and if the heart tests strong then you know that the underwire bra is causing continuous stress on that heart, not to mention what it's doing to the lymphatics, blocking lymphatic drainage from the breast, and all this other stuff that causes problems, all pretty well documented. We've saved a few lives that way, I think. You could just put some fingers on there and—if the person doesn't jump off the table, then you know they probably don't have a hot gall bladder—if there's a problem, it'll go weak.And the liver the same way. The biggest breakthrough I made in this work is discovering there are things that can prevent the body from healing even if you do everything else right. In years of researching this and applying it to thousands and thousands of patients, we came down to five things that are the most common stressors. This is an excerpt from a coaching session from Dr. Ulan's DVD, Summary of the Theory and Purpose of Dr. Ulan's Nutrition Response Testing, AVAILABLE FREE AS AN EBOOK at unsinc.info/ebook.html. ^J