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Wednesday, 15 October 2008

How good are your detections skills?

Just how good are your detections skills when you see a client? It’s easy to miss the obvious but I find there is always a key to the problem it’s just a matter of finding what or where it is.


>A client came to see me a few years ago who had been to several doctors and many therapists but still felt really ill. There appeared to be no clue as to why. She had tried all different diets, supplements, homeopathic remedies, pills, antibiotics etc but never felt any better. Specialist after specialist made no difference. Symptoms ranged from absolutely no taste in her mouth no matter what she was eating, sore throat, aching all over, weak, dizzy, diarrhoea, nausea to name but a few.


I decide to use Kinesiology as there is no guesswork with it. In case you are not familiar with Kinesiology it’s muscle testing so you can establish if there is a weakness in any particular area of the body and what that weakness will respond to. Maybe a flower remedy, vitamin or mineral or what I particularly like using Kinesiology for is food sensitivity testing.


I think it’s rather spooky. Once you have tested all the muscles to see that they are strong or if they are not to go through the process of seeing what they need to become strong you then place different foods that they eat onto their body or next to their jaw (please do let them put it into their mouths!) and test all the different groups of muscles again. If they are sensitive to something one or more sets of muscles will go weak and there’s nothing that the client can do about it. You remove the food and the muscle is strong and the client can see and feel for themselves what effect that food is having on their body. When you put the food next to their jaw or on their body the muscles go weak.


So I went through the full session with the client, making the necessary adjustments etc and made an appointment for food sensitivity testing the following session. I did the session and to my surprise nothing came up. We went over and over what she ate on a regular basis etc. There must be something else I said. “What do you eat regularly that’s not on this list”? The only thing she had not mentioned was the fruit she ate everyday so obviously I needed to test this as well.


I started testing the fruit she ate and as I picked up the kiwi fruit she said “No don’t put that against my skin because it will blister”. I asked her how many she ate a day and why if they made her skin blister and she replied that she ate 2 a day because they are good for you. Good for some people but you’re not one of them!

It turns out that she put a pair of gloves on in order to handle the Kiwi fruit, sliced the top off and scooped the flesh out with a spoon and tipped it down the back of her throat twice a day!!! Needless to say the advice was don’t eat the Kiwi fruit anymore! Problem solved. So look for the obvious and use your detection skills!


Sue and Nigel Barker

w. www.ultimatetransformation.co.uk
t. 01884 861677
e. info@ultimatetransformation.co.uk

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