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Healing Energy Dictionary | A Wisdom Archive on Healing Energy Dictionary |  | Healing Energy Dictionary A selection of articles related to Healing Energy Dictionary |  |
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Healing Energy Dictionary, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary
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Alternative
Health Dictionary on Chakra healing chakra healing (chakra balancing, chakra energy balancing, chakra therapy, chakra work): Subject of The ABCs of Chakra Therapy: A Workbook (Samuel Weiser, Inc., 1998). chakra healing is any means of energy clearing that focuses on or has been geared to chakras, including aromatherapy, hatha yoga, reflexology, and visualization (see creative visualization). (See also: Chakra healing, Body Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
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Health Dictionary on Magnet therapy magnet therapy (biomagnetics, biomagnetic therapeutics, biomagnetic therapy, biomagnetism, Electro-Biomagnetics, electro-biomagnetics therapy, magnetic energy therapy, magnetic field therapy, magnetic healing, magnetics, magnetic therapies, magnetic therapy, magnetotherapy, magnotherapy): Variation of self-healing based on natural laws. Magnet therapy reestablishes order in the human energy system. Its theory posits life energy and meridians and depicts magnets as sources of nature's healing energy. Some proponents equate magnetic energy, energy, life force, chi, and prana. (See also: Magnet therapy, Body Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
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Health Dictionary on Vibrational medicine vibrational medicine (energetic medicine, energetics medicine, energy medicine, subtle-energy medicine, vibrational healing, vibrational therapies): Healing philosophy whose main tenet is that humans are dynamic energy systems (body/mind/spirit complexes) and reflect evolutionary patterns of soul growth. Its principles include the following: (a) Health and illness originate in subtle energy systems. (b) These systems coordinate the life-force and the physical body. (c) Emotions, spirituality, and nutritional and environmental factors affect the subtle energy systems. Vibrational medicine embraces acupuncture, aromatherapy, Bach flower therapy, chakra rebalancing, channeling, color breathing, color therapy, crystal healing, absent healing, Electroacupuncture According to Voll (EAV), etheric touch, flower essence therapy, homeopathy, Kirlian photography, laserpuncture, the laying on of hands, meridian therapy, mesmerism, moxibustion, orthomolecular medicine, Past-life Regression, Polarity Therapy, psychic healing, psychic surgery, radionics, the Simonton method, sonopuncture, Toning, Transcendental Meditation, and Therapeutic Touch. The expressions energy healing, energy work, and energetic healing work appear synonymous with vibrational medicine. (See also: Vibrational medicine, Body Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
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Health Dictionary on Polarity Therapy Polarity Therapy (Polarity, polarity balancing, Polarity Energy Balancing, Polarity Energy Balancing system, polarity energy healing, polarity healing, polarity system, Polarity techniques, Polarity Wellness): Eclectic natural health care system originated by Austrian-born Randolph Stone, D.C., D.O., N.D. (1890-1982), and based primarily on Ayurvedic principles. It includes basic Polarity counseling, cranial balancing (see CranioSacral Therapy), guided imagery, hydrotherapy, Polarity bodywork, Polarity dream counseling, Polarity evaluation, Polarity nutrition, Polarity reflexology, Polarity Yoga, and spinal balancing. Its principle is that balancing the flow of energy in the body is the foundation of health. According to its theory, the top and right side of the body have a positive charge, and the feet and the left side of the body have a negative charge. Thus, practitioners place their right hand on negatively charged parts of the client's body, and their left hand on positively charged parts. Polarity theory also posits a cleanable cellular memory. (See also: Polarity Therapy, Body Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
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Health Dictionary on Do-In Do-In [dough-in] (Dao-In, Tao-In, Taoist Conducting and Attuning Energy Practice, Taoist yoga, Taoist hatha yoga, Tao Yin): Ancient system of stretching, bodily postures, and movements, comparable to hatha yoga. Michio Kushi (see macrobiotics) introduced Do-In in the United States in 1968. Its theory posits Chi energy flow and the energy meridians of acupuncture and shiatsu. it also posits a human ability to absorb nutrition from the air and from surrounding energy. With each Do-In posture, one inhales ki (life source energy) and exhales jaki (harmful toxins). Although Do-In is a discipline of self-healing, its ultimate goal is spiritual harmony with the universe. (See also: Do-In, Body Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
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Health Dictionary on Er Mei Qi Gong Er Mei Qi Gong (Er Mei, Er Mei Chi Gong Therapy, Er Mei Qi Gong Therapy, Er Mei Qi Gong Therapy External Energy Diagnosis and Treatment system, Er Mei system): Form of Qigong therapy founded in 1227 by a Buddhist who had been a Taoist priest. Er Mei theory posits spiritual channels, a third eye, and Qi (chi, ki, qi energy, vital energy). The Er Mei Sudden Enlightenment School has described Qi as an amazing, unique form of matter that is audible, palpable, visible, tastable, and usable for miraculous healing. The focus of Er Mei is development of the ability to transmit Qi to others with the intention of furthering their healing and/or spiritual empowerment. In practitioners, it develops clairvoyance and precognitive and telepathic abilities. It includes acu-meridian energy transmission bodywork. (Er Mei is also the name of a mountain visited by the system's founder.) (See also: Er Mei Qi Gong, Body Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
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Health Dictionary on
ENERGY THERAPY ENERGY THERAPY The evolution of scientific concepts and technological developments of the late 20th Century has created possibilities for studying subtle energies and their relationship to human systems. Understanding and facilitating the use of subtle energies, both for therapeutic purposes and for the study of human potential, may bring to consciousness a new awareness of the depths of the human psyche. There are many terms applied to different techniques of energy therapy, see lthe following links: Pranic Healing, Therapeutic Touch, Reiki (See also: ENERGY THERAPY, Alternative Health, Holistic Health, Body Mind and Soul)
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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)
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