Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Upcoming CE Courses, Seattle-- Montlake Terrace, WA

 

CE Continuing Education with Patrick Moore

N C B T M B # 396103-00 November 1, 2, 3, 2008

Class size limited to 8 participants per day.

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Author of "Releasing the Atlas and Axis..." in Massage&Bodywork magazine, 2003.

Visit www.meltingmuscles.com for full text

Blog: www.meltingmuscles.blogspot.com

Register by phone: 623-670-0442

Register by email: healingbrain@gmail.com

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Hosted by Sunrise International Healing & Learning

Center, 22002—64th Ave. W. Suite M4,

Mountlake Terrace, WA 98043, and by

Giacintah Vosika, L.M.P, Reiki Master/Teacher

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Releasing the Atlas and Axis Using Melting Muscles Technique www.meltingmuscles.com


Sat, Nov 1, 2008

9:00 am to 5:00 pm

7 CE hours

$140.00

includes book


You will learn to release the obliquus capitis inferior muscles that rotate the atlanto-axial joint. Because we begin simple and add only simple steps, your hands easily digest the maneuvers until you are surprised to see the complex sequence your hands are doing. I guarantee everyone in class will get it. Now, your conscious brain is likely to forget what you learn this day unless you also read the workbook several times within a week or two. The workbook will be emailed to you as soon as you register so that you may read ahead if you like. After mastering the complex AA joint, learning to release the occipito-atlantal sidebenders (obliquus superior) and myodural bridge (rectus capitis minor) will seem easy as pie. Prepare to be profoundly relaxed when you receive this ultra-gentle maneuver.


Melting Muscles is a conversation you initiate with a person's subconscious brain. Your hands say "safety" through

positioning short of the subtle motion barrier, movements that are slow and steady, pressure that gradually builds and retires, and by seeking to feel the cranial muscle motion. The person "hears" through their muscle proprioceptors and pressure sensors. The person "replies" by reducing muscle contraction, and by reversing or releasing cranial muscle motion. You keep the conversation interesting by adding your own personal strokes to the muscles. Whether the person's forebrain falls asleep, talks about the weather, tries to "help" or resist, you remain engaged in a lively conversation with the person's subconscious brain. Because treatments are gentle and thumb-free, your hands are happy. Their muscles relax more fully and permanently than ever before.


Negotiating directly with the brain does far more than relax muscles: the immune system finds more joy in supporting the person. The digestive, endocrine, integumentary, nervous, and cardiovascular systems return to efficient balance. A person in a state of peace rethinks behaviors and relationships. The world becomes a better place. No sitting at desks--100% table time! Theory is presented verbally as your hands work on, or receive from, your partner. Each Melting Muscles photo-workbook will be emailed to you as soon as you register so that you may read ahead if you like.

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Advanced Energy Topics: Releasing Cellular Memory

Sun, Nov 2, 2008

10:00 am to 3 pm

5 CE Hours

$105.00


Recommended Reading: Cell Talk by John Upledger, p 1-36, 110-186. purchase for $29 at amazon.com http://www.amazon.com/Cell-Talk-Talking-Your/dp/1556434618/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1222794211&sr=8-1 or read online for free http://books.google.com/books?id=tLn4a0soVoUC at google books


Cellular memories may be stored in an organ, muscle, fluid, or any tissue. A man receiving a kidney transplant found his taste in reading material changing from tabloids to Jane Austen.


Long Term Genetic memory includes the inheritance of tendencies that aid survival of the species, such as recognizing tigers as something that might want to eat me me, and deer as something I might want to eat. These patterns have been in place for a million years, created through natural selection-those who had the memories lived (long enough to pass on their DNA) more frequently than those who did not get the memories. Human male group strategies for having more DNA in the next generation lean toward impregnating multiple females, while female group strategies lean toward enticing one man to stay loyal to protect her offspring. The human body has only become lactose tolerant in the last five thousand years, when dairy farming began, and now lactose tolerance is passed on to most human offspring.


Short Term Genetic Memory: Charles Darwin believed that genes changed only randomly and could only be selected by survival of populations over thousands of generations. In fact this belief remains prominent even with experts like Stephen Jay Gould. However, Chevalier de Lamarck (1744-1829) argued against Darwin that each being changes intelligently in response to life events and passes these altered genes to their children. In 2007 research finally proved him accurate. Male mice exposed to a particular pesticide were avoided by females, and so were the exposed mice's children and children's children for several generations, showing that the genes changed and passed into offspring. This means each of us may have genetic predispositions, aversions, skills, or other adaptations to events that our parents, grandparents, or great-grandparents experienced. Pathogens are remembered by the immune system so that immunity remains lifelong. It is widely believed that mothers may pass immunity to many pathogens through breast milk.


Archetypal memory, postulated by Carl Jung, would explain the symbolism that has meaning and value for most or all humans such as rites of passage, interpretations of dreams, the deeper meaning of animal symbolism like the eagle, the coyote, the bear, and the snake.


Traumas create a very strong imprint that may stay in the body for years, decades, or longer. The Gulf War alone has has produced 10,000 Traumatic Brain Injuries and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders.


When suffering continues after physical and mental healing modalities have been exhausted, many therapists are now allowing the possibility of past life traumas.


About the course: Using scanning techniques borrowed from Reiki (Byosen Scanning) and John Upledger (Arcing), students learn to locate trauma in the body and brain. Using a combination of visualization, symbolism, hands-on energy, hands-above energy, breathwork, and intention, we coax the patterns free of the body, often with immediate changes in muscle tension, breathing, and positive comments from the recipient.


This course in the "Advanced Topics in Energy" series is for those practitioners who have previous education and experience using energy work, craniosacral, osteopathic technique, shamanism, faith-based healing, or other ways of detecting and releasing unwanted patterns.

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Reversing Tendinitis


Mon, Nov 3, 2008

9:00 am to 1:00 pm

4 CE Hours

$70.00


Tendinitis is scar tissue. There are two problems with scar tissue--first, it creates a lump that rubs on other things which creates pain from friction. Second, randomly directed scar tissue fibers are not as strong as the original parallel tendon fibers. Reversing tendinitis is simply a matter of removing the non-parallel fibers of scar tissue with the effects of ice. The only difficult part is finding the exact site of the lesion, which is smaller than a grain of rice. That's why we'll practice drawing, palpating and icing these tendon sites: subscapularis, infraspinatus, supraspinatus, extensor digitorum, flexor digitorum, plantar fascia, pectineus, and psoas. Please read the article by Patrick Moore in advance at http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Patrick_Moore

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teacher bio

Patrick's love for science, nature, and spirituality was apparent from an early age. In Oregon, he was a Boy Scout camping every month, snow, rain or shine, for four years. In 1977 he attended his first energy work training through the Silva method and completed 320 hours by 1987. During this same time he completed a degree in Math from Whitman College and began teaching Math at Western Washington University. Patrick received five Tibetan attunements including Medicine Buddha from Jigdal Dagchen Sakya and Chenrezi (compassion) from the Dalai Lama in 1992. He attended the legendary Brian Utting School of Massage from 1992-94 in Seattle and since has completed over two thousand hours of continuing education in Cranio Sacral, Osteopathic Technique, Medical Massage, Healing Energy, and Therapeutic Relationship. He has published about Melting twice in Massage&Bodywork and Massage Therapy Journal and numerous online articles including those at http://meltingmuscles.blogspot.com . Patrick also loves writing poetry and fiction.

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