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NIS and the Eyes

 

Astigmatism, Hypermetropia, Myopia, Glaucoma

The eyes become the conductors of sight, the correlating medium for balance, the warning
system of impending danger, a reference system via the associating cortex, an anticipatory
system via the pre-motor cortex, the system that triggers pictures of words and ideas and creativity. 

This is a system that can digitise, pixelate and file... and when least expected, deliver a perspective that can change one's mind, change one’s life, change the direction of a countries thinking, and the world's understanding. The eye formulates a memory of experience that is filed for our enjoyment.  We enjoy life because of what we SEE.  Yes I know blind folks enjoy life as well, but they also ask people with sight to explain to them what they SEE. 

Some memories are abhorrent and are culled through the discernment of ouramygdala.  I feel eyes are the single most important means of communicating.   When I see the eyes of kids light up when they SEE a new toy, or maybe a friend, or a new puppy, it is so powerful. There are many facets that can alter the functionality of the eyes.  The common issues of myopia, hypermetropia, astigmatism, and glaucoma can all take their toll to distract our potential to see.  Three years ago I was interested to investigate if the brain could alter the refractive powers of the lenses of our eyes.  The changes have been significant, especially with children.

 

 

“Doctor, Did you say I have a subluxation?


We talk about it, we explain it to our patients – and so what’s the problem with that?  No problem – except the problem is not the subluxation - the subluxation is the symptom. Subluxation is a compound word, inferring it has more than one stem. The World Health Organization considers a subluxation to be a "significant structural displacement, and therefore visible on static imaging studies.

Orthopaedics interprets the word to suggest a dislocation of any joint that will usually need medical attention to help relocate or reduce the joint. “Nursemaid's elbow” for example is the subluxation of the head of the radius from the annular ligament. Other joints that are prone to subluxation are the shoulders, fingers, kneecaps, and hips affected by hip dysplasia.

Opthalmology uses the term subluxation to refer to ectopia lentis, an ocular condition characterized by a displaced or malpositioned lens within the eye.

Chiropractic
defines the term as a relatively common condition in which a spinal vertebra has lost its proper juxtaposition with one or both of its neighbouring vertebrae.

NIS has a very different viewpoint:
If you hit your finger with a hammer, what caused the problem?  Was it the finger being in the wrong position or the inability of the person to co ordinate the hammer? The bruised finger is symptomatic evidence of failed co ordination that became synonymous with the utterance of a string of adjectives!
Similarly, a subluxation is a failed attempt of the brain to maintain homeostasis. Each and every second we undergo multiple dynamic equilibrium adjustments allowing self regulatory mechanisms to achieve homeostasis. This allows the human body to function effectively in a broad range of environmental conditions. A simple example would be the dilation or constriction of peripheral blood vessels that allows the body to adapt quickly to the ambient temperature.

A question to consider:
If the brain has such a homeostatic capability then why would we persist with manual intervention to address such issues as a subluxation? NIS is based on quantum physics, where all that occurs in the physical body is subservient to the brain being a reference grid or filter for that action.

The basis of real health in real time is the ability of the body to conduct vital information immediately.  Reliance of nerve conduction speed has been totally outmoded with the NIS approach for the last 18 years. A new horizon in health care potential became very evident when science explained the speed at which molecules can relay information electromagnetically. [McClare, C.W.F (1974) “resonance in bioenergetics” Annals of the New York academy of sciences 227:74 – 97

  1. All the information that is carried in the human body is linked to a molecules available energy, and this energy travels @186,000 miles per second. Electromagnetic frequencies have been shown to be 100x more efficient to relay environmental information. In direct contrast, the diffusible chemical speed involving hormones and neurotransmitters to relay information travels @ 1 centimetre per second. Also, chemical coupling is accompanied by massive energy loss due to heat generated in the making and braking of chemical bonds. This limits the amount of information that the signal can carry.
  2. Application of the scientific principle of electromagnetic conduction has dramatically revised the way the body will respond and the speed at which it responds. NIS has found that laboratory measurements of Immunopathology values constantly reflect changes as a result of using these principles. Such changes now being observed show positive improvements in the various carcinoembryonic antigen markers.
  3. Historically, areas of dysfunction such as spinal subluxation have become the focus of attention. The global issue rests with a dysfunction in the body’s tensegrity system that embodies every cell.  Ingber, D. E. (1997). Tensegrity: the architectural basis of cellular mechanotransduction.  Annual. Rev. Physiol. 59, 575 – 599]
These principles form an integral part of the NIS system.

I attended a seminar given by James Oschman PhD. on the principles of tensegrity. Like other attendees I was impressed with the theory and posed the obvious question to the group – “what do we do with this information tomorrow”? A respondent alluded to the course as being a means of giving credence to the practitioner involved in physical medicine. I wasn’t concerned about the credence it gave me, but rather what tensegrity could do if its principles could be implemented as a dynamic entity.

In 2009 NIS will reveal this dynamic entity and teach what tensegrity is really all about. The brain will instruct the body to “strut its stuff” in such a profound way that will eliminate all the symptoms of subluxation of the human spine! Too good to be true? - No, it so true even the spine (not to mention the patient) will thank you for eliminating the expressive idioms “pop and crunch”!

By Dr Allan K Phillips D.O
January 2009