Holographic Acupressure - massage and bodywork professionals2024-03-28T15:44:59Zhttps://massageprofessionals.com/forum/topics/holographic-acupressure?commentId=2887274%3AComment%3A372072&xg_source=activity&feed=yes&xn_auth=noHad a totally cool day today.…tag:massageprofessionals.com,2018-08-01:2887274:Comment:3735332018-08-01T02:03:21.583ZGordon J. Wallishttps://massageprofessionals.com/profile/GordonJWallis
<p>Had a totally cool day today. Every patient I interacted with today experienced dramatic results. I mean really dramatic results. The one I’m going to talk about now was the least dramatic, because she only had this pain for a month or so. The others have had years of pain. </p>
<p>Her symptom was pain behind the eye, that was getting worse. It was so bad that it kept her awake at night for a month. And she still felt it during the day. She came into the clinic with it. We have a new…</p>
<p>Had a totally cool day today. Every patient I interacted with today experienced dramatic results. I mean really dramatic results. The one I’m going to talk about now was the least dramatic, because she only had this pain for a month or so. The others have had years of pain. </p>
<p>Her symptom was pain behind the eye, that was getting worse. It was so bad that it kept her awake at night for a month. And she still felt it during the day. She came into the clinic with it. We have a new doctor in the clinic and he called me into the room. After a brief visit the patient and I walked across the hall to my room. It was so simple. Her eye pain completely and immediately vanished when I deactivated one trigger point. </p>
<p>Here is her brief testimonial along with a picture of the trigger point that made her miserable for a month. These people that keep telling me that trigger point aren’t real? They are very real.</p>
<p><a rel="nofollow noopener" href="https://youtu.be/5X9uQYKqFR4" target="_blank">https://youtu.be/5X9uQYKqFR4</a></p>
<p><a href="https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/1935428763?profile=original" target="_self"><img width="721" src="https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/1935428763?profile=RESIZE_1024x1024" width="721" class="align-left"/></a></p> Correction. Just found out t…tag:massageprofessionals.com,2018-07-28:2887274:Comment:3736252018-07-28T23:57:08.037ZGordon J. Wallishttps://massageprofessionals.com/profile/GordonJWallis
<p>Correction. Just found out the guy does not have to see a chiropractor at all. But other insurance policies do require the massage be done on the same day as a chiropractic adjustment. </p>
<p>Correction. Just found out the guy does not have to see a chiropractor at all. But other insurance policies do require the massage be done on the same day as a chiropractic adjustment. </p> This interesting, and makes n…tag:massageprofessionals.com,2018-07-27:2887274:Comment:3735242018-07-27T01:40:21.702ZGordon J. Wallishttps://massageprofessionals.com/profile/GordonJWallis
<p>This interesting, and makes no sense. I recently had a new patient that I was able to help dramatically. I will add his testimonial at the end of this comment. He had shoulder pain. He came into the clinic to see the doctors. The physician assistant that initially saw him suggested that he see me before he leaves the clinic. Because he suspects a large myofascial component to his shoulder pain. And if what I did helped, we would put a script in for manual therapy. </p>
<p>When he…</p>
<p>This interesting, and makes no sense. I recently had a new patient that I was able to help dramatically. I will add his testimonial at the end of this comment. He had shoulder pain. He came into the clinic to see the doctors. The physician assistant that initially saw him suggested that he see me before he leaves the clinic. Because he suspects a large myofascial component to his shoulder pain. And if what I did helped, we would put a script in for manual therapy. </p>
<p>When he first came into my room. His forward flextion was about 90 degrees. That’s raising his arm just parallel to the ground before the pain stopped him. He had trigger points in all the right places. All my releases worked. And after a 20 minute session he had a 70% to 80% reduction in pain and 130 degree forward flextion. That’s dramatic enough for me to know that I can probably help him. I recommend 15 minute sessions three times a week for two weeks. That would show maximum results for this kind of therapy. </p>
<p>So here is the weird deal about it. His insurance company will pay for a rediculess number of massages, something like 50 or more, but only if he gets a chiropractic adjustment on the same day. Now I work with an Osteopathic physician, and they do spinal manipulations. But the insurance company said no, only an adjustment from a chiropractor. Give me a break. That’s so lame. He is a patient in our clinic. He wants to see me because I can help him. So anyway I referred him to a chiropractor that’s an acquaintance of mine. But the patient doesn’t know if he has time or even wants to get an adjustment on the same day. But I talked him into trying it, might as well. But in order to give my therapy the best chance I really need to see him two or three times a week. Anyway unbelievable. Now of course the chiropractor is going to have a treatment plain. I don’t know what that could mean? And if the chiropractor does some kind of physical therapy on him. There is a very good chance that it will undo what I’m doing. </p>
<p>People wonder why insurance is so expensive. I always tell people that the insurance companies want everything to be expensive(no one believes me). So expensive, that if you want treatment, you have to have insurance. Well I will try to help the guy as much as I can. But it’s kinda like swimming up stream. </p>
<p>Here is his testimonial. <a href="https://youtu.be/U2y1OtXj_aM" target="_blank">https://youtu.be/U2y1OtXj_aM</a></p> I learned a lot from others,…tag:massageprofessionals.com,2018-07-23:2887274:Comment:3733182018-07-23T03:37:59.127ZGordon J. Wallishttps://massageprofessionals.com/profile/GordonJWallis
<p>I learned a lot from others, but then went on and developed techniques from there. I still keep discovering new techniques. This is a good example of my latest techniques. I can now eliminate multiple trigger points at once. There could be two or three trigger points under the palm of my hand. Its really cool. All that being said. The procedures don’t work on everyone. They work on almost anyone. And once you understand the concept( seeing the body in a new way). There is hardly a…</p>
<p>I learned a lot from others, but then went on and developed techniques from there. I still keep discovering new techniques. This is a good example of my latest techniques. I can now eliminate multiple trigger points at once. There could be two or three trigger points under the palm of my hand. Its really cool. All that being said. The procedures don’t work on everyone. They work on almost anyone. And once you understand the concept( seeing the body in a new way). There is hardly a trigger point that can’t be eliminated. I mean would Barns Myofascial release have worked as quickly as I was able to in the video below? What about Active Release? I’m not bragging. Trust me. Anyone can do this. Once they understand the principles and concepts. </p>
<p><a rel="nofollow noopener" href="https://youtu.be/ccdgsAv8HOY" target="_blank">https://youtu.be/ccdgsAv8HOY</a></p> I watched the video. No mista…tag:massageprofessionals.com,2018-07-21:2887274:Comment:3735142018-07-21T17:28:40.275ZAjayhttps://massageprofessionals.com/profile/Ajay
<p>I watched the video. No mistaking... Your technique is scarily close to what I saw a Japanese osteopath do at a clinic I visited in Tokyo many years ago. I don't know what the name of the modality is, but it's not new. I think you have independently stumbled onto something that's the same, or very similar.</p>
<p>Cheers.</p>
<p>I watched the video. No mistaking... Your technique is scarily close to what I saw a Japanese osteopath do at a clinic I visited in Tokyo many years ago. I don't know what the name of the modality is, but it's not new. I think you have independently stumbled onto something that's the same, or very similar.</p>
<p>Cheers.</p> I think I’m going to change t…tag:massageprofessionals.com,2018-07-19:2887274:Comment:3735122018-07-19T19:41:10.715ZGordon J. Wallishttps://massageprofessionals.com/profile/GordonJWallis
<p>I think I’m going to change the name of my modality. Holographic Acupressure is kinda hard to say. And some scientific minded people are turned off by the word Acupressure. I think I will call it The Pain Control Matrix. But regardless of its name, these procedures are truly revolutionary when it comes to dealing with myofascial pain. All other forms of trigger point work are obsolete. In the video below you will see me treat an injured Achilles’ tendon. How injured? Well it was…</p>
<p>I think I’m going to change the name of my modality. Holographic Acupressure is kinda hard to say. And some scientific minded people are turned off by the word Acupressure. I think I will call it The Pain Control Matrix. But regardless of its name, these procedures are truly revolutionary when it comes to dealing with myofascial pain. All other forms of trigger point work are obsolete. In the video below you will see me treat an injured Achilles’ tendon. How injured? Well it was enough to keep her from running and walking with a slight limp. Now how would a conventional trigger point therapist treat an injured Achilles’ tendon ? How would any bodyworker/manual therapist treat an injured Achilles tendon ? The treatment that you will see in the video has never been seen before. It has never been done before. And what other form of manual therapy would work as quickly? After the treatment, I re-palpate, and the pain is not there anymore. Will the pain come back? Probably. I will most likely have to repeat that treatment a few more times before it’s fully healed. But it only takes a few minutes. Anyway, check the video out. <a rel="nofollow noopener" href="https://youtu.be/9E2TuRXq9ns" target="_blank">https://youtu.be/9E2TuRXq9ns</a></p> This is cool. This patient h…tag:massageprofessionals.com,2018-06-27:2887274:Comment:3730502018-06-27T03:02:20.884ZGordon J. Wallishttps://massageprofessionals.com/profile/GordonJWallis
<p>This is cool. This patient had numbness in her big toes for over two years, as well as painful range of motion in her neck. People are often freaked out over the effectiveness of Holographic Acupressure. It truly works like magic. I may be able to totally eliminate the numbness in her big toes? I actually did not know about the numbness in her big toes until her second appointment, which is the most recent appointment. She had very painful tibialis anterior trigger points in each…</p>
<p>This is cool. This patient had numbness in her big toes for over two years, as well as painful range of motion in her neck. People are often freaked out over the effectiveness of Holographic Acupressure. It truly works like magic. I may be able to totally eliminate the numbness in her big toes? I actually did not know about the numbness in her big toes until her second appointment, which is the most recent appointment. She had very painful tibialis anterior trigger points in each leg. </p>
<p>Anyway, check her testimonial out, and look at the pain pattern of the tibialis anterior. </p>
<p><a href="https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=cjBf1W-kW80" target="_blank">https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=cjBf1W-kW80</a></p>
<p><a href="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/1935428459?profile=original" target="_self"><img width="721" src="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/1935428459?profile=RESIZE_1024x1024" width="721" class="align-full"/></a></p> Sort of a follow up. The pat…tag:massageprofessionals.com,2018-06-22:2887274:Comment:3730402018-06-22T02:36:30.530ZGordon J. Wallishttps://massageprofessionals.com/profile/GordonJWallis
<p>Sort of a follow up. The patient above. The one with the knee pain. She was doing excellent until she went to physical therapy yesterday. I don’t know about these physical therapists. She was a 1/10 prior to the physical therapy, and an 8/10 after. Really hurting. She said the exercises hurt her leg. One of the exercises they had her doing was kicking her heal to her butt. Her biggest, most nastiest trigger point was that popliteal muscle. That totally inappropriate exercise gave…</p>
<p>Sort of a follow up. The patient above. The one with the knee pain. She was doing excellent until she went to physical therapy yesterday. I don’t know about these physical therapists. She was a 1/10 prior to the physical therapy, and an 8/10 after. Really hurting. She said the exercises hurt her leg. One of the exercises they had her doing was kicking her heal to her butt. Her biggest, most nastiest trigger point was that popliteal muscle. That totally inappropriate exercise gave her such pain. When I saw her today, that muscle was tender as a boil. </p>
<p>Ive mentioned this before, in my other threads. That I don’t even wanna see anyone if they are currently in physical therapy. I can pretty much count on them undoing any progress I’ve made with a patient. I will see them after the physical therapy fails. Because if they have trigger points, it will fail. Unless the physical therapist knows about trigger points and is doing some kind of myofascial work themselves. This is not an isolated case. It’s normal. </p>
<p>Anyway, after I saw her today, she was a 1/10. She had even more trigger points then the first time I saw her. After the session she looked at me and said. I’m not going to physical therapy anymore. I feel good now. </p>
<p><a href="https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/1935428338?profile=original" target="_self"><img src="https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/1935428338?profile=original" width="570" class="align-full"/></a></p> Today was a good day in the c…tag:massageprofessionals.com,2018-06-19:2887274:Comment:3729182018-06-19T02:49:42.998ZGordon J. Wallishttps://massageprofessionals.com/profile/GordonJWallis
<p>Today was a good day in the clinic for me. Everybody I touched, I was able to help in a dramatic way. A couple notable ones come to mind. One of the physician assistants called me into one of the treatments rooms to see if I could help this patient. Last week he had gotten some procedures for his shoulder pain. Prior to the procedures he could barely lift his arm but a few degrees. After the procedures he could lift it to about the 90 degrees. That’s parallel to the ground. The PA…</p>
<p>Today was a good day in the clinic for me. Everybody I touched, I was able to help in a dramatic way. A couple notable ones come to mind. One of the physician assistants called me into one of the treatments rooms to see if I could help this patient. Last week he had gotten some procedures for his shoulder pain. Prior to the procedures he could barely lift his arm but a few degrees. After the procedures he could lift it to about the 90 degrees. That’s parallel to the ground. The PA was wondering if there was anything I could do for him? In less then two minutes, to his astonishment, and mine, he lifted his arm 165 degrees before pain stopped him. This shoulder condition has been going on for a couple years. He had trigger points in all the right places. He was freaked out happy. </p>
<p>Another patient had knee pain to the point that once she sat down, she needed help in order to get to a standing position. Her knee pain was at a 5 to 6/10 level. She was a scheduled patient for me. Never saw her before. After fifteen minutes she could stand up without pain from a sitting position. You should have seen the look on her face. That was cool. Here are her treatment notes. Look at all the trigger points. The popliteal was the worst one. The power of these procedures are impressive. I’m freaked out on a daily basis. <a href="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/1935428641?profile=original" target="_self"><img width="721" src="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/1935428641?profile=RESIZE_1024x1024" width="721" class="align-full"/></a></p> Here is an interesting video.…tag:massageprofessionals.com,2018-05-25:2887274:Comment:3725582018-05-25T16:18:56.768ZGordon J. Wallishttps://massageprofessionals.com/profile/GordonJWallis
<p>Here is an interesting video. It’s a co-worker that had a knee problem. These techniques are powerful. Pain(myofascial)is literally gone in seconds. This video was done a few weeks ago. Only this one treatment, she has been pain free ever sense.</p>
<p> </p>
<p><a href="https://youtu.be/wM6SmQj8cKY" target="_blank">https://youtu.be/wM6SmQj8cKY</a></p>
<p>here is her testimonial right after the treatment. …</p>
<p></p>
<p>Here is an interesting video. It’s a co-worker that had a knee problem. These techniques are powerful. Pain(myofascial)is literally gone in seconds. This video was done a few weeks ago. Only this one treatment, she has been pain free ever sense.</p>
<p> </p>
<p><a href="https://youtu.be/wM6SmQj8cKY" target="_blank">https://youtu.be/wM6SmQj8cKY</a></p>
<p>here is her testimonial right after the treatment. </p>
<p><a href="https://youtu.be/V_NCX8T-_Gc" target="_blank">https://youtu.be/V_NCX8T-_Gc</a></p>