Wednesday, August 10, 2011

【Dizziness after the earthquake】東北大震災以降、自分が揺れていると感じる方や、フラフラ感、めまい、メニエール病の相談が相次いでいます。

A  junior high school student, K, has been having a symptom of dizziness for about a year. Since Tohoku earthquakes in March, she has been feeling worse, and gone to see a doctor, and was diagnosed with Meniere's disease.

K's mother, who has found HSTi from the internet asked about her daughter during her first session.

"My junior high school girl says she is dizzy, so I took her to a hospital, and was told that she has Meniere's disease. I don't think that this dizziness would cure. But do you think that adjusting skeletal structures would help?"

"Since the earthquake, we have been receiving similar inquiries. I heard that it is a relatively common symptom for people who live in high-rise apartment due of the structure of buildings."

"My apartment is over 20th floor! Can it be the cause of her dizziness?"

"Not all people who live in high-rise apartments have the symptom, do they? The difference between those who have the symptom and those who don't is because of their skeletal structures.

We stand perpendicular to the earth's axis. When there are contortions on our skeletal structures, it can't make perpendicular, so our skull makes contortions to make our brain parallel and perpendicular to the axis of the earth. Therefore when our skeletal structures have contortions, our brain is constantly looking for the parallel and perpendicular position. That why some people feel dizzy." I explained.

K came to our place soon after.

"I've been feeling dizzy for about a year..." says, K, who is very pretty but looks tired and has dark shadow under her eyes. In the past she broke her leg, below her knee, but she doesn't remember right or left, so I told her to ask her mother. In the first session, I aligned her side skull, which had large contortions, and cervical vertebra #7, and rib # 7, both of them are related to side skull.

Her second session:

"How are you today? Did you ask your mom about the broken leg?"

"Well, I had completely forgotten about it..."

Since she did not have any major complaints that day, I tried to find out the place of broken bone below her knee. Upper part of her left tibia was twisted outward, middle part was twisted inward, and right tibia was in a posterior direction, toward outside.

After the aligning her legs, dark shadow under her eyes was disappeared and she said, "my head is clear." 

Our body is all connected, therefore, adjustment of an old injury, even if you think it is not relevant, becomes critical.

"Do you still feel dizzy?"

"Since the first session, I am not dizzy at all." I was very happy to hear that.

By Ikuko Amano (Ms.) 天野郁子
HSTi Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

Original article found here in Japanese 日本語リンク
http://www.hstp.org/cs/2011/08/post-399.html


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