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85% Restricted to a Wheelchair for Two Years
My Goddaughter
 

 

After years of having an active sports life, what with horse riding, tennis and competitive swimming, my knees started giving me trouble. At the age of 25, the surgeons decided to operate, doing a hip ostectomy. This entailed rotating both femurs out at 30 degrees and 45 degrees respectively. They thought that by doing this major go, it would take the weight and pressure off my knees. After two years of operations involving the insertion of pins and plates to hold it all together, and then an additional knee op, involving a bone graft from my hip, the surgeons were of the opinion that a further go at a later date would sort me out.
For me, this was a total disaster. I was now walking with my feet out at angles of 90 degrees between them and generally waddling like a duck. Another drawback was that I could not climb stairs or kneel, let alone get up off the floor unassisted.

Then Brian came along, did a balance on me, and within 15 minutes my feet were straight, I could kneel, and could do stairs which I hadn’t been able to do in the past 3 years. I would not have believed this result possible if I hadn’t experienced it. I am still finding more movement in my hips every day.
Things I thought I’d never be able to do again (i.e., even sitting on the floor cross-legged) I’m now doing without any hesitation at all. It is really fantastic to be totally “normal” again.

Commentary:
The foregoing testimony is about my Goddaughter, who was only six when I left South Africa. In the testimony, she forgot to mention that she did so much horse riding that she had put a lot of stress on the adductor muscles that pull the legs together. These muscles, being held in extension over a horse’s back for hours at a stretch, switched the stress receptors for that muscle on so they switched off—in other words, blew a fuse. This of course, affected all the other synergistic muscles behind the knees and the Sartorius muscle that turns the knee out. I learned about the stress receptor from a book by Dr. Walther, a chiropractor in California.
For the life of me, I cannot believe that the Medical Fraternity knew so little about the human anatomy and the motor power of same that they went for BONE. I WENT TO SOUTH AFRICA, PUT MY HANDS ON MY GODDAUGHTER’S FOREHEAD, SWITCHED THE STRESS RECEPTOR OFF ON THE ADDUCTOR MUSCLES, AND THE LEGS WENT BACK INTO PLACE DESPITE ALL THE SURGERY.

The medical doctors had already taken out the plates and screws in her hips and the legs went out again. Then they said, “Well, the op didn’t seem to have worked, but we’ll do it again and we won’t charge you this time.” Then I went there and did the stress receptors. Fifteen minutes and everything was back to normal! Medical doctors, you have a lot to learn!


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