sjbimmerle
Joined: 06 Jan 2005 Posts: 52
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Posted: Mon Jan 24, 2005 6:54 am Post subject: Successes from assists in Indonesia |
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Success stories:
Success Stories:
A man came into the tent with an injured leg. He said that he had gone to the doctor to get it looked at, and the doctor had just wanted to give him drugs. Anders gave him a touch assist, and when he came out of the tent he was now able to kick his injured leg up into the air. He was very relieved and keen to learn how to do assists himself.
At a hospital, Yu Ning from Mainland China did great and all the juices were demanding assists and the team had to promise more when they return the next day. There were people who could not feel their legs after having broken their legs, but after the assists both were happy with the results, saying they could feel their body parts again. Great successes. A person there has set up a children's ward and wants to be trained and will bring ten kids along with him for to get them trained too.
A team also went to an orphanage. Wayne from Perth trained six professionals on how to do nerve assists. They did the assists on the kids and the kids started doing them on each other. A professional at culinary Care Unit in a hospital has offered the VMs a room to train people in.
(Lucas from Perth)
They have another translator who has joined the VMs by the name of Andy. His mother was traumatised by the tsunami and was taken to Medan. His father, sister and brother are also with her. He has decided to help the VMs full time in translation whereever they need him to go. He went with VMs to a hospital, and did great!
Sarah Milne helped an old lady who was very hunched over and solemn looking when she came in. Sarah did a nerve assist on her, and she started smiling. When it was over, she stood up, and was standing almost straight, with a big grin on her face.
Sarah Milne gave an assist to a man at the military hospital who was almost completely non-responsive at the start and and was definitely not smiling. When she went back the next day she did another touch assist. By the end of the second assist he was grinning, and said to our translator 'you set my spirit delicious'.
An elderly lady came in with eyes very sad. Shirlee started a nerve assist. After a while of giving the assist to her, she asked the lady how she was doing and she started crying. Through the interpreter she told Shirlee she had lost her husband and other family members. Shirlee continued the assist and in the end the woman had experienced relief and the tears had stopped.
A number of local residents have been trained on assists.
One lady who came in received and nerve assist from Sarah Milne and a locational assist from Vivienne Barter. Once they finished they taught her how to do both the assists, as she told them she was going down the coast to help children find lost parents. She was very impressed with the tech.
VM Yu Ning did a nerve assist on an old woman and she cried in the middle of it. She kept doing the assist and she slowly stopped crying. Yu Ning ended it with a locational and afterwards the woman said she felt much better and was smiling and holding Yu Ning's hand tightly with thanks.
Lucas did an assist on a man at the military hospital. He had TB and was coughing, and moaning and a body communication process was done. When they started he could hardly communicate with them. When the team went back he was sitting up in his bed, smiling. _________________ Stewart James
310-356-7887 hm
310-557-0000 ext 211
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