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Electronic Muscle Tester sale $169.00 $99.00
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| Digital Electronic Muscle Tester with New Power Grip

Just squeeze the compact, ergonomic power Grip and a pleasant voice announces your active grip force in pounds or kilograms at the push of a button. Great for those who practice self-Kinesiology testing and experimentation.
The Digital Electronic Muscle Tester with Power Grip features:
Advanced LCD Feedback
Soft Voice Feedback. 
The easy-to-read LCD shows: Active muscle force.
Cumulative muscle force up to 9,999.9 lbs.
Maximum muscle force up to 111 lbs.
Total muscle test count up to 999.
Self-Testing Applied Kinesiology.
One of the most exciting innovations in the health care field over the past four decades has been the development of muscle testing (kinesiology) as a feedback tool to identify both the cause of the body's imbalance and what is required to bring the body back into balance. The Power Grip Muscle Tester is an effective research tool which i recognized as a useful, inexpensive adjunct to personal kinesiology testing.
It is a valuable tool, perfect for those who have been recently introduced or are learned practioners of self testing wellness kinesiology. Bruce Hansen D.C.
What is Kinesiology & Electronic Muscle Testing?
Kinesiology is a brand new branch of science which was developed by doctors, chiropractors and acupuncturists. They pooled their knowledge and added it to Chinese medicine to develop a totally new technology which is amazingly efficient at balancing the body so that it can return to excellent health, energy and emotional strength. It stands apart from any other type of health technology largely due to its use of revolutionary muscle testing. Note: The term “kinesiology” as used here means that which is connected with either Academic Kinesiology (including Applied Kinesiology) or Specialized Kinesiology and always includes manual or electronic muscle testing. It is not to be confused with another definition of ‘kinesiology’ which is taught in some colleges and is defined simply as “the branch of physiology that studies the mechanics and anatomy in relation to human movement”. Kinesiology is a truly 'holistic' system, because it looks at the whole person (not just at selected parts). When you step on a dog’s tail, it's the other end that screams! Kinesiology looks at all types of stresses which can cause disease. They include emotional, nutritional, structural and electrical stress. The basis of Kinesiology is that the body is like an electrical piece of equipment, which is controlled by an incredibly complex computer, namely the brain. The brain is continually in communication with each of the 639 muscles in the body. If a muscle is electrically in balance, it is possible to measure it’s strength output or the constant electrical signal from the brain to that muscle and back again, much the same as two faxes 'talking' to each other. However, when the system is overstressed (through a chemical, emotional, structural or electrical cause), the electrical signals in one or more muscles go weak. It is like a fuse in your fuse box blowing. The body figures that it is better to blow a fuse than to blow the whole thing. This is the basis of muscle testing! The use of the Power Grip Muscle Tester (EMT) is advancement in self-testing. When mastered it is an able research tool aiding in the self-testing process. It is a valuable tool used by many in kinesiology. This is particularly significant when you realize that there are many different parts of the body constantly communicating with many other parts of the body. That is, - Muscles communicate with muscles
- Muscles communicate with organs
- Organs communicate with muscles
- Organs communicate with organs
The body can also be used to answer "yes" or "no" questions with a strong or weak response. For example, by use of the Power Grip Electronic Muscle tester, the self-tester can ask the body almost any form of question which could help determine what caused this muscle to go out of balance. If it was a chemical you could ask the body what specific food or other substance caused the body to go out of balance by a series of isolation questions. If it was a deficiency, you could follow isolation questioning to determine what was deficient, you could test herbal remedies singularly with the simple question “Is this remedy beneficial for my overall health” an increase measured with the Power Grip Electronic Muscle Tester would indicate a yes, and a lower reading would indicate a no. Self-electronic muscle testing puts you in control of your world. Through proper use this research tool could help you uncover what what serves your physical, emotional, mental and spiritual wellbeing. Of course everybody is different at different times. When a body is well balanced, foods, or herbal remedies which were previously weakening may become neutral, and neutral foods may become strengthening. We highly recommend reading some of the fine books on the subject. The electronic Power Grip Muscle Tester, in personal researcher’s hands is an invaluable tool. DISCLAIMER: This information and these products have not been evaluated by the FDA. These products and information are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease, disorder, pain, injury, deformity, or physical or mental condition. Individual results may vary.
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Applied Kinesiology:
Muscle-Testing for "Allergies"
and "Nutrient Deficiencies"
Muscle Testing
The human body is a very useful tool providing instant feedback. profesional Kinesioligist For processing purposes there are various ways of utilizing the body of the client to provide feedback on how we are doing. One easy and effective way of getting feedback is through a method called Muscle Testing.
Muscle testing is also referred to as Applied Kinesiology. Chiropractors use it to find which parts of the body need adjustment, and to check if an adjustment has been successfully made. They use it combined with elaborate knowledge of the skeletal and musculatory system. If one touches certain key points of the body and at the same time tests if a certain muscle is weak or strong, that can indicate if that key point needs correction or not.
The interesting thing is that muscle testing works just as well on mental or emotional issues as on physical body parts. Basically one can put one's attention on something and then test for a weak or strong response. That is something we can use.
See, the body is not as much of a liar as the conscious mind is. It is much more likely to give an honest assessment of what is going on than the person's analytical thinking is. The body will give answers to things that are submerged and unknown to the conscious processes, and it will give answers without being biased by wishful thinking or social maneuvering.
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Basically, strong means "Yes" and weak means "No". Whether a Yes or a No answer is most desirable depends on what we ask for, but most often we will ask in such a way that a strong response is good. As in "Do you feel good about yourself" - Test - should be strong, meaning "Yes". If it is weak, we could then work on the issue of feeling good about oneself, with our usual processing techniques. And then, when we appear to have gotten somewhere, we could do a muscle test again to confirm it. If it is now strong when we ask the same question, then we have probably done a good job.
| Maybe Answers. "Yes" and "No" are fine answers, but what about "Maybe?" Or, "yes, but...". Or, "NO, don't even think about it!" Or, "You're getting close, but you're not there yet".
Many people who use such methods as muscle testing develop the sensitivity to be able to discern shades of yes and no. Try it out -- ask to see a range of positive and negative answers. With practice, you'll be able to pick up on these nuances.
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Muscle testing is a very finite way of testing. If nothing else, it appears very finite to the client. It provides a very tangible and convincing "proof" to the client that we have actually gotten a result. The client can much more easily invalidate purely mental and emotional results. Even if she feels good and she has found out something new, she might still convince herself a few days later that it was "just" something she imagined. But if we have tested it and we both realized that what used to be weak is now strong, that might weigh a lot more heavily in the favor of accepting the change that took place.
| And Law of Attraction starts bringing you more of what you want when you are vibrating at a high positive frequency. |
The muscles really do react to what one thinks and feels and imagines. But the test it fairly honest and unbiased. Whereas a purely analytical assessment of what one feels might not be as honest.
The facilitator can use muscle testing according to preference. It is just one of the tools that are available. You don't have to use it for anything at all, or you can use it for every single issue that you work on with the client, that is up to you.
Muscle testing can be used for a comprehensive test of items from a list or arrived at some other systematic way.
For example, you can read aloud, or let the client read from a list of possible items one could be allergic to, and you can test for each one. This can give amazingly precise results.
Also, one can go over the client's body and test each body part systematically. It can be done by mentioning it and having her put attention on it, or if it is an outer body part it can be touched lightly. And you test for each one if it is strong or weak. This indicates areas that should be worked on in one way or another.
What you are addressing is the mental, emotional, and spiritual phenomena that can be found in the person's world. Finding out what is there and changing it can have profound effects, also on health.
In using muscle testing, it is important that you are very precise in what you ask for or what you put attention on. If you give a sloppy unfocused question or direction you will get a confused answer.
There are many texts available on muscle testing that can give you a much more thorough understanding of its use than what is presented here.
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Applied kinesiology (AK)
Applied kinesiology (AK) is the term most commonly used to identify a system of muscle-testing and therapy. It was initiated in 1964 by George J. Goodheart, Jr., D.C., and has become quite elaborate. Its basic notion is that every organ dysfunction is accompanied by a specific muscle weakness, which enables diseases to be diagnosed through muscle-testing procedures. Most practitioners are chiropractors, but naturopaths, medical doctors, dentists, nutritionists, physical therapists, massage therapists, and nurse practitioners, are also involved. In 1991, 37% of 4,835 full-time American chiropractors who responded to a survey by the National Board of Chiropractic Examiners (NBCE) said they used AK in their practice [1]. Subsequent NBCE surveys found percentages of 31% in Canada (1992) [2], 60% in Australia (1993) [3], 72% in New Zealand (1993) [3], and 43% in the United States (1998) [4].
Finding a "weak" muscle enables the practitioner to pinpoint illness in the corresponding internal organs in the body. For example, a weak muscle in the chest might indicate a liver problem, and a weak muscle near the groin might indicate "adrenal insufficiency." If a muscle tests "weaker" after a substance is placed in the patient's mouth, it supposedly signifies disease in the organ associated with that muscle. If the muscle tests "stronger," the substance supposedly can remedy problems in the corresponding body parts. Testing is also claimed to indicate which nutrients are deficient. If a weak muscle becomes stronger after a nutrient (or a food high in the nutrient) is chewed, that supposedly indicates "a deficiency normally associated with that muscle." Some practitioners contend that muscle-testing can also help diagnose allergies and other adverse reactions to foods. According to this theory, when a muscle tests "weak," the provocative substance is bad for the patient.
Goodheart states that AK techniques can also be used to evaluate nerve, vascular, and lymphatic systems; the body's nutritional state; the flow of "energy" along "acupuncture meridians"; and "cerebro spinal fluid function." The 70-page chapter on "meridian therapy" in a leading AK textbook advises that subluxations influence the status of meridian system and vice versa [7].
As you become faster with your testing, you can use it for deciding what you choose and use during your day. Your clothes, your foods and beverages, any purchase you are considering, any choice can be checked to see if the body is enhanced or diminished energy-wise by a certain selection.
Many muscle-testing proponents assert that nutrients tested in these ways will have an immediate effect: "good" substances will make specific muscles stronger, whereas "bad" substances will cause weaknesses that "indicate trouble with the organ or other tissue on the same nerve, vascular, nutrition, etc., grouping."
Contact Reflex Analysis (CRA) proponents claim that over a thousand health problems can be diagnosed with a muscle test during which the chiropractor's finger or hand is placed on one of 75 "reflex points" on the patient's body. If the patient's arm can be pulled downward, a condition corresponding to the "reflex" is considered present, and dietary supplements are prescribed.
Jaffe-Mellor Technique (JMT) involves muscle-testing while the patient holds a small glass vial containing the test substance..
Nambudripad's Allergy Elimination Technique (NAET) is based on the notion that allergies are caused by "energy blockage" that can be diagnosed with muscle-testing and permanently cured with acupressure and/or acupuncture treatments.
The Dawson Program, also called vibrational kinesiology, was developed over 28 years by Cameron Dawson, an Australian businessman. According to Dawson's Web site:
The Dawson Program uses the Kinesiological technique of muscle testing to trace and identify the root cause of each imbalance affecting the body's energy system and impeding the body from self-healing. This results in conditions such as Dyslexia, learning difficulties, chronic fatigue, depression, stress, Eczema, Asthma, Psoriasis and behavioural problems.
| With so many different types of approaches, which is the best and most accurate to use? The answer is simple: one (or more) which best fits your abilities and talents and which you enjoy learning and using. For example, some people are perfectly wonderful card readers, and others can barely shuffle the deck. While certain individuals receive vivid visual imagry, others are psychically blind as a bat. Finding the tools you feel most comfortable with is key. |
The New Digital TruTester
" The Next Generation"
TruTester lets anyone utilize the powerful science of applied kinesiology (AK) without the need for a partner to conduct a two-person muscle test. Get ready to discover fascinating secrets about yourself, others and the world in just seconds with this simple tool. Using TT, the body speaks as the voice of the subconscious mind. When you go weak, it is saying No. When you stay strong, it means Yes. You're about to tap into the unlimited wisdom and power of a self that holds the keys to wealth, health and happiness as you uncover the answers to virtually any questions you may have.
TruTester lets you know things that defy description or explanation
TruTester activates the ancient part of your brain so that you actually perceive reality before consciousness separated us from the world. You will see energy. You will experience in real time the magnificent state of silent knowledge as described by my "teacher", Carlos Castaneda. This unforgettable event finds you in a state where you "know everything." And it is life-changing.
If you are ready.
If you are looking for answers that have always eluded you - the wait is over.
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References
Christenson MG, Morgan DRD. Job Analysis of Chiropractic: A Report, Survey Analysis, and Summary of the Practice of Chiropractic within the United States. Greeley, CO: National Board of Chiropractic Examiners, 1993.
Christenson MG, Morgan DRD. Job Analysis of Chiropractic in Canada: A Report, Survey Analysis, and Summary of the Practice of Chiropractic within Canada. Greeley, CO: National Board of Chiropractic Examiners, 1993.
Christenson MG, Morgan DRD. Job Analysis of Chiropractic in Australia and New Zealand: A Report, Survey Analysis, and Summary of the Practice of Chiropractic within Australia and New Zealand. Greeley, CO: National Board of Chiropractic Examiners, 1994.
Christenson MG and others. Job Analysis of Chiropractic: A Project Report, Survey Analysis, and Summary of the Practice of Chiropractic within the United States. Greeley, CO: National Board of Chiropractic Examiners, 2000.
Valentine T, Valentine C. Applied Kinesiology: Muscle response in diagnosis, therapy and preventive medicine. Rochester, VT: Thorsons Publishers, 1987. Written with help from Douglas P. Hetrick, D.C., and Davis S. Walther, D.C.
Applied kinesiology nutritional testing. In Walther DS. Applied Kinesiology: Synopsis. Pueblo, Colorado: Systems DC, 1988, p 135.
Goodheart GJ Jr. You'll Be Better: The Story of Applied Kinesiology. Geneva, Ohio, AK Printing, undated, published during early 1980s.Meridian Therapy. In Walther DS. Applied Kinesiology: Synopsis. Pueblo, Colorado: Systems DC, 1988, pp. 203-273.
Infections: A lifetime of health for your child. Pueblo, Colorado: Systems DC, 1977.
Kenny JJ, Clemens R, Forsythe KD. Applied kinesiology unreliable for assessing nutrient status. Journal of the American Dietetic Association 88:698-704, 1988.
Triano JJ. Muscle strength testing as a diagnostic screen for supplemental nutrition therapy: a blind study. Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics 5:179-182, 1982
Haas M and others. Muscle testing response to provocative vertebral challenge and spinal manipulation: a randomized controlled trial of construct validity. Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics 17:141-148, 1994.
Applied kinesiology - Double-blind pilot study. Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry 45:321-323, 1981.
Ludke R and others. Test-retest-reliability and validity of the kinesiology muscle test. Complementary Therapy in Medicine 9:141-145, 2001.
Applied kinesiology status statement. International College of Applied Kinesiology - U.S.A. Townsend Letter for Doctors, June 1993, pp 628-629.
ICAK-U.S.A. Executive Board. Letter to Stephen Barrett, M.D., Nov 11, 1998.
Klinkoski B, Leboeuf C. A review of research papers published by the International College of Applied Kinesiology from 1981 to 1987. Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics 13:190-194, 1990.
Ferreri CA. N.O.T. Basic Procedures. Brooklyn, NY: Ferreri Institute, 1991.
Cooke P. The Crescent City cure. Hippocrates 2(6):61-70, 1988.
Unorthodox "cure" for kids spawns lawsuits, outrage. San Francisco Examiner, March 6, 1988.
Allergies.:What is the Allergy Tap? Health Kinesiology Web site, accessed 1/25/02.
Casura LG. Interview with Scott Walker, D.C., founder of neuroemotional technique (NET), and Steve Shaffer, an NET practitioner. Townsend Letter for Doctors & Patients, July 1998, pp 128-134.
The ONE Foundation. Health Pyramid Web site, August 15, 1998.
What is a JMP treatment like? Jaffe-Mellow treatment Web site, accessed Jan 25, 2002.
What is the Whole System HealthScan? Whole System HealthScan Web site, Accessed Nov 22, 1999.
Enhance your practice. Whole System HealthScan Web site, Accessed Nov 22, 1999
Albert Einstein
"Everything in life is vibration"
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