Interesting observation with a patient…
We use a device in our office much like the hospital, called
a tuffsat pulse oximeter. It reads two
measures of oxygen…availability and delivery.
Oxygen concentration…as I say…are the boxes on the truck…which can be
affected by asthma, anemia, COPD, etc.
Oxygen perfusion…as I say…are the trucks on the street…which is affected
by adrenaline, noradrenaline, cAMP…these are all stress factors.
This patient arrives with an oxygen perfusion at 20% of the
lowest level of normal. Actual
numbers…1-3 is normal…she measured at 0.18.
I even put it on my finger to see if it was working properly…yup, shot
right up to 2 something.
My first goal with everyone is to reduce physiological
stressors…the stuff going on inside the body…inflammation, hormones, etc. Often, when patients come in low, after we
treat them, the numbers are fine. In her
case, it still measured at 0.18.
Now, I could question my treatment…and I do. I double checked some reflexes…retested the
weak muscles…all were strong. Next, I mentioned
that these numbers were affected by stress factors, and asked if there was
anything going on in her life. She
paused, thought, and replied a fairly certain no.
I went on to tell her of my years of practice, under the
guidance of therapist Gary Rollins, of noticing the negative. I told her how we instinctively, and perhaps
through some learned behaviors, look away from yucky things…our yucky
things. This doesn’t apply to our love
of watching others pain!
If you smash your thumb with a hammer, your first instinct
is to look away. You don’t want to see
the blood…your blood. But, realizing
that ignoring it will be more painful than dealing with it, you look back,
clean it up, and bandage the wounds.
I went on that life is just like that. We instinctively look away from our
wounds…which, in the emotional realm I call triggers. In simple terms, triggers are upsets. I told her about several things that triggered
me, from Amory breaking the parking lot rules, to Sonya not taking care of
herself the way she “should” in my opinion.
I explained that it was pretty obvious when my 2 year old
was missing…I clamped down on the parking lot rule. The issue with Sonya more followed the look
away rule. I didn’t see my upset
building…or rather I turned away…because I didn’t know what to do about
it. And the end result was a blow up
type argument that could have so easily been prevented.
The point…it will keep slapping you in the face until you
acknowledge it…as we say to the twins at teeth brushing time…you will do this…the
easy way…or the hard way.
After this short explanation, I gave her a moment to
reconsider…and now, after enjoying my pain (I gave 5 or 6 examples)…she found
something irritating. And she got in to
it…telling me how irritating and why irritating…and all the details of what was
irritating.
And you know what…even as she described her “trigger,” her
oxygen perfusion went up. Sure
enough…just talking about the irritation brought her up to 0.3. Yes, that’s only a third alive, but much
better than one fifth.
Then we examined the charge.
Her stress originally was in the large intestine meridian, which, when
you expand your understanding beyond western medicine and pooping…means
criticism. We tapped on the criticism
she felt in this irritation…the real reason it was irritating…and, sure
enough…she nearly came back to life (up to nearly 1.0).
The wonderful thing for me…as I see this all the time…and
with past approaches have been less than successful in helping people achieve
calm (and sometimes lead to increased “triggering” and yelling at me!!)…was
that she was able to do just what I am here to do for people…notice…calm…and
heal.
In this case, it was merely the noticing how personal she
was taking it. Sometimes you have to
hold a boundary…face a conflict. She
just had to laugh at herself. And she
did. More nourished than when I greeted
her! And that translates perfectly into healing…
PS. She has already been featured in our amazing healing
videos, and plans on an even more amazing video…!
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