Too Painful to Live On
By Conrad Ho, Hong Kong, August 30, 2017
On 29 August 2017, I worked on a client whose case was revealing. The client was a male doctor in his 40s, suffering from an inherited disease in which the heart valves closed incompletely. It had no symptoms until last year when he began to feel occasional discomforts. Several months back, after thorough medical check, he was diagnosed to have this condition. What prompted him to go for a detailed medical check? He was trained in western medicine and had learnt qigong, reportedly upto the level where he could see through the human body in search of “sick qi” in black with his naked eyes and scan for the diseased location with his bare hands. For such amazing abilities, he had numerous patients.
However, after working on so many patients, it was said that he had absorbed some of the sick qi from his patients. Gradually, he developed the symptom of extreme pain between his eyebrows. He went for a detailed medical check but Western medicine could not find anything. He turned to his qigong master who forcefully closed his “X-ray” eyes. The pain left his eyebrows and moved to the tip of his nose. When I met him, I considered that the pain was not as serious as his heart condition, which could kill him anytime. He, instead, insisted that if the pain continued, there was no point to cure the heart. From the depressed look on his face, it dawned on me suddenly what was too painful to live on.
The first thing I did, following the usual protocol of counselling, was to talked with him about his pain. Let him describe in details its root, nature, sensations and course. This was to help him gain more conscious understanding of the phenomenon he was facing and experience the care of those people (including his sister) around him. When he felt more aware and his mind clearer, I asked him what he did want. What would give him the will to live even though the pain persisted. He thought for quite a while and finally told me that he wished to witness the wedding ceremony of his only child. Well! That would be a good goal in a Kinesiology balance.
Then, I let him imagine that he was at the wedding scene. The newly-wed knelt down before him and served him a cup of tea. I really put a glass of water in front of him and let him rehearse getting the cup of tea to drink. Although I could not see too many changes from his facial expression, I could see some subtle movements showing that he was moved but tried to cover them up.
For the procedure, I just used the 14-muscle Balance-As-You-Go Protocol from the basic Touch for Health Synthesis class. During the process, I did not find unlocked muscles across the board in muscle tests. There was no phenomenon in which every skill had been used but no adjustment could be achieved. The whole process was normal and simple. It took less than half an hour to finish the 14-muscle protocol itself. In addition to all the muslces being back to their locked state, the pain dropped to 20% according to his verbal report.
I really felt baffled. He had spent a lot of money in 1.5 years to look for various professional treatments. Though occasional minor improvements emerged, nothing significant surfaced. Eventually, the client felt too painful to live on, so depressed that he was at the brink of giving up. At that point, I applied a Touch for Health balancing procedure, spending 1.5 hours in total, and his pain subsided to only 20%.
When I saw him off, he was wearing a smile on his face. He whispered to me, “During the re-testing when I role-played drinking tea from my son and his partner again, I experienced a long-forgotten sense of joy.” Seemingly, he was afraid a loud voice would shy away his joy.