Ask Dr. Barre

REAMS, Bio Feedback

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    Discussion
  • #389182

    Dinanath Nitai Das
    Participant

    Hi dear Dr. Barre, thank you for all your good work 😀

    did you use in your practice anything connected with the Reams Biological Theory of Ionization ?

    and do you know any good books or how you can learn bio feedback to test with kinesiology ?

    Kind Regards

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    Replies
  • #389255

    barre
    Organizer

    Hey Dinanath

    Yes, I did an Ionization Analysis on every client, every visit. I also ran stress chains with the numbers, which isn’t widely know in IA circles. I was in the pioneering circles of Applied and Clinical Kinesiology with George Goodheart, Wally Schmitt and Alan Beardal, so we pretty much created the material for professional seminars. Much of Kinesiology, unfortunately, strayed far from being a neurological science, so a word of caution prior to jumping into the many existing offshoots. For the AK basics I’d recommend Applied Kinesiology Synopsis by Dave Walther who was in our original group. If you master these fundamentals you can go much deeper with more specificity down the road, but this should keep you busy for a good while. Have fun, and please holler with further questions!

  • #389328

    Hi Dr. Barre, thank you for taking the time to reply 🙂

    what are stress chains and what do they do ? and what are IA circles?

    Kind Regards

    • #389347

      barre
      Organizer

      I was referencing my “circles of influence” in the early Ionization Analysis student groups. In more advanced work the IA numbers reveal the primary organs affected the most when the equation strays from ideal. Depending on the organ and other variables it’s possible to map out “stress chains” which are related to emotional state traumas and a very close approximation as to the time of life when they occurred. Typically an analysis will reveal anywhere from 6 – 12 traumas. There is a time consuming process to sequentially take a client through these episodes and discharge the “pressure” one by one. This involves some training, and it wasn’t my favorite pass time, but it often needed to be done in challenging cases. Organs can also be evaluated with infrared technology to reveal similar events.

  • #389582

    this is from the urine of the patient right ?

    and what about brain scans like in german new medicine to know what the problem in the body is related to ?

    I want to pursue studying how health really works, and have been finding good alternative sources, I completed now a years course on the principles of Ayurvedic medicine, what was your journey in terms of education ?

    Kind Regards ?

    • #389590

      barre
      Organizer

      Yes urine. A synopsis of my background is on the About page of this site. To read a CAT scan accurately it requires thorough medical training, but it’s limited in practical clinical value anyway. I’d suggest that gaining a mastery in Ayurvedic medicine is by far superior on many levels in both treatment and diagnosis.

  • #389714

    oh thank you, I’m going to read it,

    oh ok, just because I was reading one student of Dr. Ryke and he used a scan in is practice and it seemed quite straightforward when he made the connections with his patients on the cause of problem from what type of conflict was coming from, like for example a relationship problem.

    Dr. Barre, also in relation to cell salts, if we take a combination of them how does the body identify each element and take it to the right place to be used?

    Kind Regards 😀

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