Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Kinesiology

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Hi Donna,

>A friend of mine taught me how to

> pendulum test and I have been using it ever since.

>If you folks are interested, I'll try to explain it on the list >and all

> you have to do is practice it.

My name is , and I'm new to the list. I thought I'd introduce

myself, and also ask if you would share how to do the pendulum test. I'm

very interested!

Thank you!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am very interested in the pendulum method. Please explain...and do you

have any internet sites to refer to?

~

In a message dated 8/8/00 1:05:56 PM Central Daylight Time,

Ivanthecool@... writes:

<<

I used to do kinesiology (muscle testing). I found that the muscles get weak

very quickly causing false/positives. A friend of mine taught me how to

pendulum test and I have been using it ever since. It has been so helpful to

track down what foods YOU are allergic to, and what foods will cause candida

growth in YOUR body. Everyone is different so what might work for one won't

work for another. I saw Deepak Chopra on the Oprah show demonstrate how to

do

it. If you folks are interested, I'll try to explain it on the list and all

you have to do is practice it.

~~~~~Donna

>>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In a message dated 8/13/00 10:44:17 AM Pacific Daylight Time,

krein@... writes:

<< What is the aim of the pendulum method?

>>

, it helps in many ways, but I use it to test for food allergies,and in

the case of candida, to know whether a food I am eating feeds the candida.

~~~~Donna

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In a message dated 8/13/00 11:00:21 AM Pacific Daylight Time,

krein@... writes:

<< So how do I do it? >>

,

I posted complete details the other day and Gloria posted a URL for a

website. Mine was posted the same day you read my first message on pendulum

testing. I'm surprised you missed it...it was long!

~~~Donna

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

i am looking for either: a person in the manhattan area that would like to

experiment with kinesiology or a lowcost electrical device that can be used

to test supplements for electrical compatibility. i am currently paying alot

of money to be tested kinesiologically and it's starting to be a real

financial drain.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 months later...

josiefour@... wrote:

> In response to the way all of us seem to differer in reactions when we

> take supplements/medications, etc., has anyone here tried using muscle

> testing that certified applied kinesiologists use , and also NAET

Hi! Joan

Sorry I got your name wrong in a post.

My best source of information (after this group and the internet) is a medical

doctor who trained in China for both acupuncture and chinese herb remedies, uses

homeopathic remedies, etc, when

called for, and believes very strongly in the effect of thought on health and he

uses kinesiology exclusively, both for determining what the problem is, what

supplements will work, and if my

thinking is causing problems, if acupuncture is called for, etc.

It worked great for specific problems, like is the spleen working, should I be

taking a certain supplement, etc. What it didn't do was determine the cause of

the CFS. In good faith, we never

tested for what is causing my problems.

He is very philosophical and believes that everything happens to give us an

opportunity to grow spiritually.

Take care,

Merle

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hello all -

My chiropractor also does Applied Kinesiology on me.

She actually diagnosed my thyroid problem two years

before it showed up on tests run by my GP. It's a

good technigue for detecting systemic problems.

Jennie

lindaj@... wrote:

> I just went to an NAET therepist a couple days ago,

> and had a lot of

> kinesthesiology (sp?) testing done and found out I

> was allergic or

> intolerant to most of the supplements that I was

> taking.

snipped

__________________________________________________

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 years later...
Guest guest

<A HREF= " http://www.aakpe.org/aakpe1.htm#statement " >American Academy of

Kinesiology and Physical Education</A>

It seems to me that most of the websites I saw when I searched had to do with

Physical education, Sports Medicine, Excercize, Physical Fitness,

Biomechanics, etc. Also, many universities were listing departments of

Kinesiology.

This came from the American Academy of Kinesiology and Physical Education

Kinesiology: The Field of Study

Kinesiology refers to the study of movement. In American higher education,

the term is used to describe a multifaceted field of study in which movement

or physical activity is the intellectual focus. Physical activity includes

exercise for improvement of health and physical fitness, activities of daily

living, work, sport, dance, and play, and involves special population groups

such as, children and the elderly; persons with disability, injury or

disease; and athletes. Kinesiology is a common name for college and

university academic departments that include many specialized areas of study

in which the causes and consequences of physical activity are examined from

different perspectives. The specialized areas of study apply knowledge,

methods of inquiry, and principles from traditional areas of study in the

arts, humanities and sciences. These areas include exercise and sport

biomechanics, history, philosophy, physiology, biochemistry and

molecular/cellular physiology, psychology, and sociology; motor behavior;

measurement; physical fitness; and sports medicine. An interdisciplinary

approach involving several of these areas is often used in addressing

problems of importance to society. The study of kinesiology can lead to a

variety of careers involving teaching, research, coaching and delivery of

services related to physical activity and fitness, health promotion,

rehabilitation and sports medicine. Positions are found in a variety of

settings including schools, colleges and universities, public and private

agencies, clinical environments, government, business and the military.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

<A HREF= " http://www.aakpe.org/aakpe1.htm#statement " >American Academy of

Kinesiology and Physical Education</A>

It seems to me that most of the websites I saw when I searched had to do with

Physical education, Sports Medicine, Excercize, Physical Fitness,

Biomechanics, etc. Also, many universities were listing departments of

Kinesiology.

This came from the American Academy of Kinesiology and Physical Education

Kinesiology: The Field of Study

Kinesiology refers to the study of movement. In American higher education,

the term is used to describe a multifaceted field of study in which movement

or physical activity is the intellectual focus. Physical activity includes

exercise for improvement of health and physical fitness, activities of daily

living, work, sport, dance, and play, and involves special population groups

such as, children and the elderly; persons with disability, injury or

disease; and athletes. Kinesiology is a common name for college and

university academic departments that include many specialized areas of study

in which the causes and consequences of physical activity are examined from

different perspectives. The specialized areas of study apply knowledge,

methods of inquiry, and principles from traditional areas of study in the

arts, humanities and sciences. These areas include exercise and sport

biomechanics, history, philosophy, physiology, biochemistry and

molecular/cellular physiology, psychology, and sociology; motor behavior;

measurement; physical fitness; and sports medicine. An interdisciplinary

approach involving several of these areas is often used in addressing

problems of importance to society. The study of kinesiology can lead to a

variety of careers involving teaching, research, coaching and delivery of

services related to physical activity and fitness, health promotion,

rehabilitation and sports medicine. Positions are found in a variety of

settings including schools, colleges and universities, public and private

agencies, clinical environments, government, business and the military.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 11 months later...
Guest guest

> I figure out, I shouldn't wear it too much due to detox, or perhaps as

> it influences on natural brain wave patterns during sleep? (I should

> only wear it during daytime)

My practitioner also recommended that I do not wear the Springlife

Polarizers while sleeping. I had already determined that when I do this,

I wake up with excessive detox symptoms (headache, dehydration, sore

throat). However, I do keep it ~3 feet away from me, which provides me

with a restful sleep that I would not get if was 20 feet away from me.

My practitioner's recommendations on how I should use my EMF devices are

also consistent with what I've learned through my own trial & error

experiments. For example, she noted that I should only wear the large

Springlife Polarizer ( " Slimline " ) in my pocket for around 5 hours. I had

already noticed that I have excessive detox and have to get away from it

at about 6-7 hours.

Marc

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...
Guest guest

Hi Faith,

I posted this message. It works quite well for me, but only to

indicate a food that you may be allergic or intolerant to. I don't

think this method picks up carbs that may cause a reactions with

candida. On the other hand, it will pick up, for example, wheat that

may cause headaches due to leaky gut, etc. Someone recently posted a

link for another method of kinesiology, which I can't find out at the

moment. Search the recent archives.

There are many other methods that practitioners use to determine

whether a particular treatment will work, etc, but I don't know those

methods yet. Look for an applied kinesiologist in your area for that.

http://www.american-chiro.com/

http://www.acam.org/dr_search/index.php?q=46204 & search=Search & field=zip & submitte\

d=1

http://www.naturopathic.org/

regards

Asli

--- Faith <Faithiegirl538@...> wrote:

> I have tried this method with all sorts of things, foods, vitamins,

> it

> always comes out ok. My fingers are never pulled apart. Something has

> to be wrong with this method. can anyone add to this? I would like to

> be able to test before I ingest.

>

> Thanks,

> Faith

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi Faith,

I posted this message. It works quite well for me, but only to

indicate a food that you may be allergic or intolerant to. I don't

think this method picks up carbs that may cause a reactions with

candida. On the other hand, it will pick up, for example, wheat that

may cause headaches due to leaky gut, etc. Someone recently posted a

link for another method of kinesiology, which I can't find out at the

moment. Search the recent archives.

There are many other methods that practitioners use to determine

whether a particular treatment will work, etc, but I don't know those

methods yet. Look for an applied kinesiologist in your area for that.

http://www.american-chiro.com/

http://www.acam.org/dr_search/index.php?q=46204 & search=Search & field=zip & submitte\

d=1

http://www.naturopathic.org/

regards

Asli

--- Faith <Faithiegirl538@...> wrote:

> I have tried this method with all sorts of things, foods, vitamins,

> it

> always comes out ok. My fingers are never pulled apart. Something has

> to be wrong with this method. can anyone add to this? I would like to

> be able to test before I ingest.

>

> Thanks,

> Faith

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...

My opinion of kinesiology is that if you get the right person, with ability

and talent, you can learn many things.

If not it's a waste of money.

Kathy

On 8/20/06, <firesprite68@...> wrote:

>

> Has anyone used this for food intolerances/allergies/supplemental

> needs etc. ?

>

> I ask because my homeopath has told me of someone who does this and

> it is very reasonably priced and is very detailed and covers lots of

> foods, supplements and allergies.

> I feel I would like to have it done so I have definites on what my

> body does and doesn't need, I know I can do the sway test but could

> never cover the amount he does in the spare time I have and he

> really goes into it deeply and you get a proper booklet all filled

> in to work with.

>

> I also know of a lady who a friend went to [on the advise of her

> homeopath] who also uses kinesiology/muscle testing and pinpoints

> exactly what is going on inside your body and what your problems

> are - she too is very specific, like she could tell my friend that

> her adrenals were very low, and her liver was very stressed etc.

>

> It would be very interesting to see how results compare with the

> avoids/neutrals/beneficials of the diet.

>

> I feel it would be greatly beneficial for me to go and have both of

> these as then we can narrow down and home in on problem areas much

> quicker than it might take for a homeopath to find them and we then

> may be able to treat some things early enough to stop them

> developing further.

>

> Anyone else have any experiences along these lines ?

>

> thanks

>

>

>

>

>

--

Cheers,

Kathy

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 years later...
Guest guest

I do believe there IS a machine for testing what is good or bad for your body using kinesiology.

As to the arm strength test: I know it sounds like alot of BS, but I used to work in a health food store and performed this for customers who requested it (I'm not trained, it was never on my suggestion, but I had some customers that wanted me to do it anyway so they could pick one brand of vitamin over another.) I used to think it was crazy, but I've seen it work.

If you have someone else (not the doctor), do this at home on you. Tell them to apply equal strength. Tell them not to tell you what you are holding. And then do a sample test holding sugar in your hand. You won't have any strength at all and it's because sugar is so bad for you.

Just experiment with it at home. You might be surprised.

Beverly

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

back in 1991 my current chiro said she could do that, being the skeptic, I brought in a whole lot of foods and substances, and I had my list from 1972. She matched my list 100% and added more. The More was shown in my 2003 scratch tests.

[low dose naltrexone] Kinesiology

I do believe there IS a machine for testing what is good or bad for your body using kinesiology.

As to the arm strength test: I know it sounds like alot of BS, but I used to work in a health food store and performed this for customers who requested it (I'm not trained, it was never on my suggestion, but I had some customers that wanted me to do it anyway so they could pick one brand of vitamin over another.) I used to think it was crazy, but I've seen it work.

If you have someone else (not the doctor), do this at home on you. Tell them to apply equal strength. Tell them not to tell you what you are holding. And then do a sample test holding sugar in your hand. You won't have any strength at all and it's because sugar is so bad for you.

Just experiment with it at home. You might be surprised.

Beverly

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 5 months later...

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...