Energy Medicine. C. Norman Shealy

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Energy Medicine - C. Norman Shealy

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      Acupuncture, developed in China, is said to date back between 3,500 and 4,000 years. Although acupuncture is based upon the modulation of chi, it involves the insertion of very fine, solid needles into specific acupuncture points on the body. There are twelve main meridians in the body which, according to studies by Ukrainian physicists, essentially represent vector potentials from the organs of the body along specific meridians out to the tip of the meridian and back.

      The major meridians are:

      • Governing Vessel: tailbone to the upper lip

      • Conception Vessel: perineum to center just below the lower lip

      • Bladder: inner eyebrow to outside of the base of the small toe

      • Gall Bladder: forehead to outside base of the fourth toe

      • Heart: upper front chest to base of the small fingernail adjacent to the ring finger

      • Kidney: inside base of the small toe to just below the head of the collar bone

      • Large Intestine: base of the index nail next to the thumb to cheek adjacent to the nose

      • Liver: outside of the medial base of the big toenail to below the nipple

      • Lung: upper outer front chest to base of the medial aspect of the thumb

      • Master of the Heart (sometimes called Pericardium): chest near front of armpit to base of the long finger adjacent to the index finger. This is the control system for the sympathetic system—the alarm or fight or flight system.

      • Small Intestine: outer side of the base of the small fingernail to just in front of the ear

      • Spleen: inside base of the big toenail to lateral chest

      • Stomach: below the eye to outside the base of the second toenail

      • Triple Heater: base of the ring fingernail, adjacent to the small finger to outside of the eyebrow. It is the control system for the parasympathetic or vegetative nervous system—the antidote to stress!

      In addition to these, there are also tendomuscular meridians. While each major meridian starts with a toe or finger, depending upon the principle meridian involved, their paths are somewhat variable and not a straight line. Although there is a great deal of argument in Western so-called science about whether the meridians exist, there is evidence, especially that presented by the French and Ukrainians, that these pathways actually do exist, and there is certainly increasing evidence that stimulating these meridians has distinct physiological effects upon the body.

      Acupuncture was introduced into France by Marco Polo in the 1300s. It has been practiced there since that time and basically has never since been totally excluded from French medicine. It was first used in the United States, appearing in the first book I am aware of, in 1859.

      As late as 1912, Sir William Osler, the Father of American Medicine, stated, “The treatment of preference in lumbago (low back pain) is acupuncture.” He specifically described placement of a solid needle into the bladder meridian, at what appeared to be at the bladder 26 point.

       Chinese Acupuncture Chart

       Illustrating the Complexities of the Meridian System

images

       (From an unsigned art print in the author’s possession.)

      The Ring Patterns

      In addition to the traditional meridians, I have personally demonstrated unequivocally that there are certain specific circuits in the body that I call Rings. (See Rings illustrations, pages 3236.)

      The Ring of Fire, when stimulated, not only raises DHEA (dehydroepiandrosterone—sometimes called the “mother” hormone and the most abundant hormone in the body). It represents your total adrenal stress reserves and is strongly associated with total immunity. It is low or deficient in every disease. Stimulation of the Ring of Fire has been demonstrated clinically to reduce migraine headaches significantly in 75 percent of patients; to reduce pain in diabetic neuropathy in 80 percent of patients; to improve depression in 70 percent of patients; and to improve, quite strikingly, not only the pain but the inflammation of rheumatoid arthritis in 70 percent of patients who have failed conventional medicine. The Ring of Fire consists of twelve specific points.

      The Ring of Water consists of thirteen specific points which, when stimulated, normalize the production of aldosterone, an adrenal hormone that balances water and potassium. Used with the Ring of Fire, it helps weight loss.

      The Ring of Air consists of thirteen different points which, when stimulated, strikingly increases the output of neurotensin, a naturally occurring pain reliever, as well as neuroleptic. A neuroleptic is a chemical which essentially sedates the body and calms and focuses the mind.

      The Ring of Earth is a different circuit of thirteen specific points which, when stimulated, markedly increases calcitonin, a hormone produced by the thyroid gland and which is responsible for putting calcium into the bone and preventing osteoporosis. It also is the strongest pain reliever produced by the body. It is forty to sixty times stronger than morphine.

      The Ring of Crystal consists of another thirteen points which, when stimulated, reduce free radical production by 85 percent. Free radicals are the negative chemicals in the body which actually destroy cell walls and are part of all disease, as well as degeneration and aging. (See more about the Rings in Chapter 8.)

      Numerous other studies on acupuncture have identified changes in other hormones, including cortisol, which is essential for life itself and is a regulator of immune function.

      Although acupuncture has traditionally been done with needles, in 1967 I began stimulating acupuncture needles electrically at one to 100 cycles/second.” Interestingly, when the first Chinese physicians came to this country after the thaw with China in 1972, I learned that they had also started using electrical stimulation of the acupuncture needles in 1967. The Ukrainian physicists and physicians have reported using electrical stimulation at a billionth of a watt per cm squared through a one millimeter blunt probe, applied directly to the skin at 54 to 78 billion cycles per second (Giga frequencies). According to them, this is twenty times more effective than putting in a needle and stimulating it electrically with low frequencies up to 100 cycles/second. Actually most acupuncturists use only 1 to 5 cycles per second for electrical stimulation.

      There seems to be no question that one can effectively activate or stimulate acupuncture points using massage and tapping (to be discussed in the chapter on Energy Psychology). Meanwhile, at the Holos University Graduate

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