 |
at Global Oneness Community.
Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum
|
 |
Dream Dictionary Medicine | A Wisdom Archive on Dream Dictionary Medicine |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine A selection of articles related to Dream Dictionary Medicine |  |
| We recommend this article: Dream Dictionary Medicine - 1, and also this: Dream Dictionary Medicine - 2. |
|
More material related to Medicine can be found here:
|
|
|  | |
Dream Dictionary Medicine, Dream Dictionary, Dream Interpretation, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Dictionary - A-Z, Dream Dictionary - A, Dream Dictionary - B, Dream Dictionary - C, Dream Dictionary - D, Dream Dictionary - E, Dream Dictionary - F, Dream Dictionary - G, Dream Dictionary - H, Dream Dictionary - I, Dream Dictionary - J, Dream Dictionary - K, Dream Dictionary - L, Dream Dictionary - M, Dream Dictionary - N, Dream Dictionary - O, Dream Dictionary - P, Dream Dictionary - Q, Dream Dictionary - R, Dream Dictionary - S, Dream Dictionary - T, Dream Dictionary - U, Dream Dictionary - V, Dream Dictionary - W, Dream Dictionary - X, Dream Dictionary - Y, Dream Dictionary - Z,
|  | | » Page 1 « Page 2 Page 3 More » |  |
 | |
|
ARTICLES RELATED TO Dream Dictionary Medicine |  |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine: Dream Interpretations
Dictionary - Medicine
Dream
Interpretation Medicine
Medicine is a magnificent symbol which could mean that your body's capacity has been activated. Taking bitter medicine means that nothing is given for free in this life, and in order to succeed you need to work hard. Taking good-tasting medicine reflects your desire to get a large sum of money, but is not going to happen.
Source: Dream-Land, http://www.dream-land.info
(See also: Dream
Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Medicine , Meaning of Dreams about Medicine ,
Dream Interpretation Medicine )
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine: Dream Interpretation Dictionary
- Medicine
Medicine Taking medication is always indicative of an attempt to restore one's health. Your unconscious mind may be encouraging you to take measures to insure your health and happiness. Consider all of the details of your dream and decide if the medication taken was helpful or hurtful. Try to connect these thoughts to your situations in daily life. See also: Meaning of Dreams about Drugs
Source: Dream Lover
Incorporated, http://www.dreamloverinc.com
(See also: Dream
Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Medicine , Meaning of Dreams about Medicine ,
Dream Interpretation Medicine )
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Dream Interpretation Dictionary - Medicine
Medicine - To dream of medicine, if pleasant to the taste, a trouble will come to you, but in a short time it will work for your good; but if you take disgusting medicine, you will suffer a protracted illness or some deep sorrow or loss will overcome you.
- To give medicine to others, denotes that you will work to injure some one who trusted you.
Source: 10 000 Dream
Interpretations, by Gustavus Hindman Miller
(See also: Dream
Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Medicine , Meaning of Dreams about Medicine ,
Dream Interpretation Medicine )
|
|  |
|
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine: : Dreams Sitemap I - M
This is a sitemap for Dream
Dictionary - M . Click on a link
and you will find multiple dream interpretations and the meaning behind this
particular dream.
Dream Dictionary - M macadamize, macaroni, machinery, machines, machines, mad dog, madness, madstone, maggot, magic, magical powers, magician, magistrate, magnet, magnifying glass, magnifying-glass, magpie, malice, mallet, malt, manners, man-of-war, mansion, manslaughter, mantilla, manufactory, manure, manuscript, map, marble, march, mare, marigold, marijuana, mariner, marmalade, marmot, marriage, mars, mars, marsh, martyr, mask, masks, mason, masquerade, mat, match, matting, mattress, mausoleum, may, may bugs, maze, meadow, meals, measles, meat, meat, mechanic, medal, medicine, melancholy, melody, melon, memorandum, memorial, menagerie, mendicant, mending, menstruation, mercury, mercury, merry, meshes, message, metamorphose, mice, microscope, midwife, mile-post, milk, milking, mill-dam, millet, mineral, mineral water, mining, minister, minuet, minx, mire, mirror, miser, missed flight, missing a boat, missing appointments, missing transportation, mist, mist, mistletoe, mocking-bird, models, molasses, moles, money, monk, monkey, monster, monsters, moon, morgue, morning, morocco, morose, mortgage, mortification, mosaic, moses, mosquito, moss, mother, mother-in-law, mountain, mountain, mountains, mourning, mouse, mouse-trap, moving, mud, muff, mug, mugs, mulatto, mulberries, mule, murder, murder, muscle, museum, mushroom, music, music, musical instruments, musk, mussels, mustache, mustard, mute, myrrh, myrtle, mystery,
More about dreams here:
Dream Dictionary
Dream Dictionary
- A, Dream
Dictionary - B, Dream Dictionary
- C,
Dream
Dictionary - D, Dream Dictionary
- E , Dream
Dictionary - F,
Dream
Dictionary - G, Dream Dictionary
- H, Dream
Dictionary - I,
Dream
Dictionary - J, Dream Dictionary
- K, Dream
Dictionary - L,
Dream
Dictionary - M, Dream Dictionary
- N, Dream
Dictionary - O,
Dream Dictionary
- P, Dream
Dictionary - Q, Dream Dictionary
- R,
Dream
Dictionary - S, Dream Dictionary
- T, Dream
Dictionary - U,
Dream
Dictionary - V, Dream Dictionary
- W, Dream
Dictionary - X,
Dream
Dictionary - Y, Dream Dictionary
- Z
Also see these pages:
Hinduism
Dictionary , Buddhism
Dictionary, Spiritual
Dictionary, Sanskrit
Dictionary , Parapsychology
Dictionary, Paganism
Dictionary, Mysticism
Dictionary , Theosophy
Dictionary , Alternative
Health Dictionary
Read more here: » Dreams Sitemap I - M |
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Dream Interpretation Dictionary - Quack Medicine
Quack Medicine - To dream you take quack medicine, shows that you are growing morbid under some trouble, and should overcome it by industrious application to duty. To read the advertisement of it, foretells unhappy companions will wrong and distress you.
Source: 10 000 Dream
Interpretations, by Gustavus Hindman Miller
(See also: Dream
Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Quack Medicine , Meaning of Dreams about Quack Medicine ,
Dream Interpretation Quack Medicine )
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Dream Interpretation Dictionary - Patent Medicine
Patent Medicine - To dream that you resort to patent medicine in your search for health, denotes that you will use desperate measures in advancing your fortune, but you will succeed, to the disappointment of the envious.
- To see or manufacture patent medicines, you will rise from obscurity to positions above your highest imaginings.
Source: 10 000 Dream
Interpretations, by Gustavus Hindman Miller
(See also: Dream
Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Patent Medicine , Meaning of Dreams about Patent Medicine ,
Dream Interpretation Patent Medicine )
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Alternative
Health Dictionary on Hippocrates health program
Hippocrates health program (Hippocrates program): Variation of Nature Cure developed by wholistic health educator Dr. Ann Wigmore (1904-1994), author of Be Your Own Doctor, The Healing Power Within, The Hippocrates Diet and Health Program, Hippocrates Live Food Program, Recipes for Longer Life, The Sprouting Book, The Wheatgrass Book, and Why Suffer?. Wigmore founded the Hippocrates Health Institute in 1957. The Hippocrates program encompasses brushing the skin, deep breathing, enemas, food combining, the Hippocrates Diet (see Living Foods Lifestyle), and exercises such as squatting. According to its theory, integration of body/mind/spirit is central to health. In Belief: All There Is (1991), Brian R. Clement, codirector of the Hippocrates Health Institute, in West Palm Beach, Florida, asserted: [B]elief can bring you anything that you desire (p. 41). He further stated that death is a sham (p. 67).
(See
also: Hippocrates health program ,
Body
Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Alternative
Health Dictionary on Grape Cure
Grape Cure (grape diet): Mono-diet advanced by Johanna Brandt, N.D., Ph.N., author of The Grape Cure ((c) 1928). The front matter of the 1967 edition, a paperback published by Benedict Lust Publications, quotes the author: My discovery of the Grape diet is the direct result of Divine Illumination. The grape diet consists of grapes or grape juice. Brandt held that the mind operated through magnetism and that the Grape Cure contributed to the purification and buildup of magnetism. She recommended it for appendicitis, cancer, diabetes, gout, pyorrhea, rheumatism, scurvy, sex problems, tuberculosis, unnatural cravings (as for alcoholic beverages, coffee, tea, and tobacco), and other conditions. Under the heading Sex Problems, she stated: By the magical purification of the blood the nerves are stabilized, self-control is established and our God-given heritage of sense and desire is transmitted into divine creative power.
(See
also: Grape Cure ,
Body
Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Alternative
Health Dictionary on Enneagram system
Enneagram system (Enneagram, Enneatype system): System of spiritual psychology based on an ancient Sufi typology of nine (ennea in Greek) personality types or primary roles: (1) the achiever (reformer) - orderly, rational, and self-righteous; (2) the helper - generous, manipulative, and possessive; (3) the succeeder (motivator, status-seeker) - ambitious, hostile, and pragmatic; (4) the individualist (artist) - intuitive, self-absorbed, and sensitive; (5) the observer (thinker) - analytic, original, and provocative; (6) the guardian (loyalist) - defensive, engaging, and responsible; (7) the dreamer (generalist) - accomplished and manic; (8) the confronter (leader) - combative, dominating, and self-confident; and (9) the preservationist (peacemaker) - easygoing and receptive. Each type has a prime psychological addiction (fixation or blind spot), respectively: anger, pride, deceit, envy, greed, fear, gluttony, lust for life and power, and laziness. These addictions include Christianity's seven deadly sins. (a) Recognition of one's type is tantamount to spiritual awakening. in the process of neutralizing the prime addiction: (b) achievers become pathfinders, (c) helpers become partners, succeeders become motivators, (d) individualists become builders, (e) observers become explorers, (f) guardians become stabilizers, (g) dreamers become illuminators, (h) confronters become philanthropists, and (i) preservationists become universalists.
(See
also: Enneagram system ,
Body
Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Alternative
Health Dictionary on Foot Reflexology
Foot Reflexology: An ancient cousin of acupuncture. It involves pressing reflex areas on the feet. Its principle is that these areas correspond to organs and systems of the body. Foot Reflexology really cleanses the mind and body and revitalizes energy. A common theory of reflexology holds that massaging certain areas of the feet restores health by breaking up and dispersing crystals.
(See
also: Foot Reflexology ,
Body
Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Alternative
Health Dictionary on Iridology
iridology (eye analysis, iridiagnosis, irido-diagnosis, iris diagnosis): Ostensibly diagnostic system whose principle is that every bodily organ corresponds to a location on the iris (the colored portion of the eye surrounding the pupil). According to iridology theory, the iris serves as a map of the body and gives warning signs of physical, mental, and spiritual problems. Proponents ascribe modern iridology to Hungarian physician Ignatz von Peczely (1826-1911), author of The Discovery in Natural History and Medical Science, a Guide to the Study and Diagnosis from the Eye (1881). , von Peczely discovered the iris-body connection in his childhood, when he broke the leg of an owl and a black stripe spontaneously appeared on the owl's iris. Probably the leading proponent of iridology in the United States is author and nutritionist J. Bernard Jensen, D.C., Ph.D.
(See
also: Iridology ,
Body
Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Alternative
Health Dictionary on Chinese medicine
Chinese medicine (Traditional Chinese Medicine, TCM): Ancient holistic system whose basics include herbology, nutrition, and the concepts of acupuncture meridians, the Five Elements (Five Phases), and yin and yang. Traditional Chinese Medicine theory posits both Organs (the Triple Burner, for example) and Substances (such as Shen, or Spirit) for which scientific evidence is absent. Variations and hybrids of Chinese medicine include Korean medicine, Tibetan medicine, and Vietnamese traditional medicine. Chinese medicine probably originated about 2,000 years ago, but it became dogmatic and stagnated for centuries; overall its development has been slow. It probably stems from shamanism. The basis of Chinese medicine is Taoism, a religion according to which spirits (shen) inhabit the human body and take care of its functions. The foundational text of Chinese medicine - known as the Classic of Internal Medicine, the Huangdi Neijing, the Inner Classic, the Inner Classic of the Yellow Emperor, the Neiching, the Nei Jing, The Yellow Emperor's Classic, The Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine, and the Yellow Emperor's Inner Canon - was completed by the first century C.E.
(See
also: Chinese medicine ,
Body
Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
|
|  |
|
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Alternative
Medicine
Dictionary on
Herbal therapy, botanical therapy, herbalism
Herbal therapy or botanical therapy or herbalism: employs parts of plants (seed, stem, flowers, root, bark, leaf) for the relief of conditions, ailments, or complaints; the earliest known form of medicine. Some popular herbs and common applications are: algae (spirulina): the most commonly used variety is blue-green algae. Algae is available in powder, tablet and supplemental fruit drink forms. Used to reduce cholesterol levels and to treat degenerative disorders, including arthritis. Unproven medical benefits include treating obesity, colitis, and diabetes mellitus. aloe or aloe vera: plant widely used as a skin moisturizer and healing agent, especially in treating cuts, burns, insect stings, eczema, bruises, acne, poison ivy rash, sunburn, and psoriasis. arnica: used as an external remedy for bruises, sprains, and sore muscles and joints. astragalus: from a family of peas that benefits digestive processes and the immune system; increases resistance to disease and infections; restores depressed immunity, and is used to treat peripheral vascular diseases and to restore peripheral circulation. black cohosh: helps relieve sinusitis and asthma; lowers cholesterol levels and blood pressure; relieves pain, morning sickness, hot flashes, and menstrual cramps. burdock: with diuretic and orexigenic properties, used to treat cutaneous eruptions, rheumatism, gout, anorexia nervosa, and eczema. calendula: traditionally used to treat gastric and duodenal ulcers, amenorrhea, dysmenorrhea, and epistaxis; varicose veins, hemorrhoids, and conjunctivitis. capsicum/capsaicin/cayenne fruit: taken orally to improve circulation, digestion, and stop bleeding from ulcers, to relieve nausea, rheumatism, arthritis, and pleurisy. Used externally for painful muscle spasms of shoulder, arm, and spine and to treat arthritis, rheumatism, neuralgia, lumbago, chilblains, intractable pain associated with shingles (herpes zoster), postmastectomy, diabetic neuropathy, and cluster headaches. cat's claw bark: used to treat AIDS patients, arthritis, neurobronchitis, allergies, rheumatism, diverticulosis, Crohn's disease, peptic and gastric ulcers, gastritis, parasites, colitis, leaky bowel syndrome, dysentery, hemorrhoids, cancer, herpes, diabetes, and inflammation. chamomile: often made into a tea and used as a digestive aid, nerve tonic, sleep aid, and appetite stimulant. cranberry fruit: used for the relief of ladder and urinary tract infections, blood disorders, stomach ailments, liver problems, vomiting, appetite loss, scurvy, and cancer. dong quai root: used for hot flashes, menopause, premenstrual syndrome, vaginal dryness, anemia with dizziness and palpitation, amenorrhea, dysmenorrhea, constipation, rheumatic arthralgia, menorrhalgia, rheumatalgia, functional bleeding, chest, and abdominal pain. echinacea herb, also called purple coneflower: bitter herb used for colds and chronic infections of the respiratory tract and lower urinary tract, treatment of Candida albicans infections, prostatitis, polyarthritis (rheumatoid arthritis). Externally, an ointment is used for poorly healing wounds and chronic ulcerations, burns, eczema, psoriasis, and herpes simplex. evening primrose oil: aids in weight loss, reduces high blood pressure, and helps to treat all skin disorders, female disorders such as cramps and heavy bleeding, hot flashes, multiple sclerosis, arthritis, and alcoholism. feverfew: used for prophylaxis and treatment of migraine headaches, nausea, vomiting, arthritis, fever, and menstrual disorders. . flaxseed: used for female disorders, colon problems, inflammation, and tumors. Promotes strong nails, bones, and teeth and healthy skin. garlic cloves: used in the West primarily for its cardiovascular effects, principally as a support to dietetic measures at elevated levels of lipids in blood and as a preventive measure for age-dependent vascular changes. Garlic is also used for atheroma, prophylaxis of atherosclerosis, hypertension, respiratory infections, and catarrhal conditions and as a natural antibiotic. ginger rhizome: primary uses of ginger are prophylaxis of the nausea and vomiting of motion sickness, dyspepsia, stomachic. It is also used as a tonic digestant in sub-acid gastritis, for lack of appetite, as a postoperative antiemetic for minor surgical procedures, for colic, for morning sickness, anorexia, bronchitis, and rheumatic complaints. ginkgo biloba leaf extract: improves memory loss, brain function, depression, cerebral and peripheral circulation, oxygenation, and blood flow. Good for tinnitus, asthma, Alzheimer's disease, heart and kidney disorders, and glucose utilization. ginseng root: used for impotence, stress, cocaine withdrawal, energy, diabetes, colds, and chest problems. Promotes lung function, enhances immune function, stimulates appetite, and normalizes blood pressure. Varieties popularly used include American ginseng, Asian ginseng, and Siberian ginseng. goldenseal: used to strengthen the immune system; acts as an antibiotic; has anti-inflammatory and antibacterial properties, potentiates insulin, and cleanses the body. Good for colds, flu, inflammation, glandular swelling, gum disease, morning sickness, diabetes, hypoglycemia, and ulcers. grape seed extract: used as a dietary supplement for antioxidant and other cardiovascular benefits and for anti-inflammatory actions. green tea leaf: believed to act as an antioxidant to prevent cancer and possibly other diseases; reduces the risk of stroke; lowers the risk of cardiovascular disease. kava kava rhizome: used to treat nervous anxiety, stress, and restlessness.Contraindicated in pregnancy, nursing, or endogenous depression. licorice root: used for catarrhal conditions of the upper respiratory tract and gastric/duodenal ulcers. Licorce is an ingredient in cough drops and syrups, tonics, laxatives, and antismoking preparations. ma huang: has been used to relieve allergies, asthma, hay fever, colds, and inflammatory conditions. The plant contains two primary alkaloids, ephedrine and pseudoephedrine. passionflower: said to possess sedative, hypnotic, antispasmodic, and calming effects. Used to treat neuralgia, seizures, hysteria, nervous tachycardia, spasmodic asthma, and insomnia. saw palmetto berry: used primarily for urination problems in benign prostate hyperplasia stages 1 and 2. St. John's wort: traditionally used as a muscle relaxant to relieve menstrual problems, as a mild tranquilizer and as a treatment for depression and insomnia. valerian root: used primarily for restlessness, sleeping disorders based on nervous conditions; also good for headaches, colic, gas, pain, stress, anxiety, muscle cramps, and spasms.
(See
also: Herbal therapy ,
Alternative Medicine, Body Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine: Natural
Health Dictionary II on
Energy Medicine
Energy Medicine: Energetic medicine as defined within the mind/body/spirit model, involves therapies that affect energy fields that defy measurement. These therapies are based on the oncept that human beings are infused with a subtle form of energy. This vital energy or life force is known under different names in different cultures, such as qi in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), ki in the Japanese Kampo system, doshas in Ayurvedic medicine, and elsewhere as prana, etheric energy, fohat, orgone, odic force, mana, and homeopathic resonance. Vital energy is believed to flow throughout the material human body, but it has not been unequivocally measured by means of conventional instrumentation. Nonetheless, therapists claim that they can work with this subtle energy, see it with their own eyes, and use it to effect changes in the physical body and influence health. Practitioners of energy medicine believe that illness results from disturbances of these subtle energies (the biofield). For example, more than 2,000 years ago, Asian practitioners postulated that the flow and balance of life energies are necessary for maintaining health and described tools to restore them. Herbal medicine, acupuncture, acupressure, moxibustion, and cupping, for example, are all believed to act by correcting imbalances in the internal biofield, such as by restoring the flow of qi through meridians to reinstate health. Some therapists are believed to emit or transmit the vital energy (external qi) to a recipient to restore health. Examples of practices involving putative energy fields include: • Reiki and Johrei, both of Japanese origin • Qi gong, a Chinese practice Healing touch, in which the therapist is purported to identify imbalances and correct a client’s energy by passing his or her hands over the patient Prayer specifically for health purposes – such as intercessory prayer, in which a person intercedes through prayer on behalf of another.
(See also: Energy Medicine ,
Alternative Health, Body Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine: : Quick
links to archives related to Alternative Health Dictionary C
Popular archives related to Alternative Health
Ayurveda, Chakra, Aura, Kundalini, Kundalini Yoga, Meditation,
Spiritual Growth, Medical Astrology, Essential Oils, Body Mind and Soul, Yoga,
Mudras, Yoga Positions, Feng Shui, Acupuncture, Acupressure, Spiritual Healing,
Relaxation, Physical Health, Vibrational Healing, Healing Music, Color Healing,
Emotional Health, Health and Healing, Health Foods, Health Man, Fruitarian
Diet, Happiness, Inner Child, Flower Essences for Healing, Highly Sensitive
Person
Alternative
Health Dictionary
Below are the archives
for the 4269 dictionary entries
related to alternative health. The great
advantage with this dictionary is that each
word is linking to an archive with
1. explanations of the word from several sources<br>
2. articles related to the word, where the phrase is used in its
natural context.<br>
Alternative Health, Alternative Health
Dictionary
Alternative
Health Dictionary - A, Alternative Health Dictionary - B
Alternative
Health Dictionary - C, Alternative Health Dictionary - D
Alternative
Health Dictionary - E, Alternative Health Dictionary - F
Alternative
Health Dictionary - G, Alternative Health Dictionary - H
Alternative
Health Dictionary - I, Alternative Health Dictionary - J
Alternative
Health Dictionary - K, Alternative Health Dictionary - L
Alternative
Health Dictionary - M, Alternative Health Dictionary - N
Alternative
Health Dictionary - O. Alternative Health Dictionary - P
Alternative
Health Dictionary - Q, Alternative Health Dictionary - R
Alternative
Health Dictionary - S, Alternative Health Dictionary - T
Alternative
Health Dictionary - U, Alternative Health Dictionary - V
Alternative
Health Dictionary - W, Alternative Health Dictionary - X
Alternative Health Dictionary - Y, Alternative Health Dictionary - Z
Archives
related to Alternative Health
Health Care, Womens Health, Mental Health, Health and Beauty,
Health and Fitness, Sexual Health, Health Food, Woman Health, Man Health,
Alternative Medicine, Health Medicine, Health Problems, Holistic Health,
Holistic Health Care, Holistic Health Therapy, Holistic Medicine, Holistic
Therapies, Natural Health, Spiritual Health, Mental Health, Spirituality and
Health
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Alternative
Health Dictionary on L'Chaim Yoga
L'Chaim Yoga: Variation of hatha yoga taught by Kay Abrahams, of New York City. It involves guided relaxation, Hebrew prayer, and makko-ho. (L'Chaim is a Hebrew expression that means to life and is used as a toast.)
(See
also: L'Chaim Yoga ,
Body
Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Alternative
Health Dictionary on Bodywork
bodywork (Bodywork Therapy, bodywork therapies): A potpourri of methods typified by exercising, manipulating, and/or manually (especially digitally) touching the body. It overlaps with energy field work. The expression bodywork is generally interchangeable with hands-on healing and hands-on health. The major categories of bodywork are: (a) massage therapy, (b) body-centered psychotherapy, and (c) touch therapy. Its major foci are: (a) body structure (e.g., chiropractic), (b) body armor (e.g., Reichian Therapy), (c) chi or vital energy (e.g., acupressure massage, acupuncture, and jin shinn), (d) relaxation (e.g., lomi-lomi and Swedish massage), and (e) the subtle body (e.g., Reiki and Therapeutic Touch). The word bodyworkers refers to practitioners of any form of bodywork that is not categorizable as acupuncture, chiropractic adjustments, osteopathy, body-centered psychotherapy, touch therapy, or energy field work.
(See
also: Bodywork ,
Alternative
Health, Body Mind and Soul)
|
|  |
|
 |  |  | Dream Dictionary Medicine:
Alternative
Health Dictionary on Resonance medicine
resonance medicine (electric medicine, electro-medicine): a group of methods exemplified by modalities that Robert Beck, Hulda Regehr Clark, Ph.D., N.D., and Royal Raymond Rife (see Rife therapy) developed. For example, Clark - author of The Cure for All Cancers: With 100 Case Histories (New Century Press, 1993), The Cure for HIV and AIDS (New Century Press, 1993) and The Cure for All Diseases (San Diego: Promotion Publishing, 1995) - discovered that an electronic device (the Zapper) could extinguish all disease-causing viruses, bacteria, and parasites in the human body in seven minutes without affecting humans.
(See
also: Resonance medicine ,
Body
Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
|
|  |
|
 | | » Page 1 « Page 2 Page 3 More » |  |
 | |
|
|
More material related to Medicine can be found here:
|
|
|
Search the Global Oneness web site |
|
|
|
 |
|