The proof of a diagnosis is to be found in the cure. Unfortunately, modern medicine considers most diseases "incurable" even though both cure and incurable are undefined medically. Most clinical studies do not contain a definition of cured and as a result, cured cases are out of scope and cannot be documented.
To your health, Tracy, Author: A New Theory of Cure
1. You cannot have 5% parkinsons or 45% parkinsons. It is 100% or 0%. So as I have found out it is pure stress/PTSD (for most people) It takes forever for people to reduce symptoms. So if they got up to 95% before they connected the dots. There is no way doctor will recognize that it is an improvement that is down to 10% symptoms.
2. If a person got free of symptoms.. They would blaim the diagnoses, not give any thoughts about the person had done something.. or stopped a stressfull life. (And if it is themself that diagnosed the person it would be shamefull to expose a wrong diagnosis
https://youtu.be/KFJYB6zCjZ0 here is one of my clients that stopped having tremor after therapy with me and got a new neurologist, that sent him to a new scanning.... and blaimed the old scanning... but he stopped having tremmor after solving a huge childhood trauma
3. They do not keep any statisic (dear x it is 3 years since last questionaire.. have you become 1) worse 2) the same) 3 improved a little 4) improved a lot.. Do you have symtoms that how big? a,b,c
Doctors are willing to say "NED," (No Evidence of Disease) but they are not willing to say cured. Cured is not even defined for many diseases. I have my own opinions about Parkinson's but I am not a doctor and I acknowledge that a cure proves the cause.
My take is. There is no cure as it is not a disease. It is people being in their instincts. That is why their symptoms vary.. It is not seldom to hear people say that they have no symptoms on vacation or linke my client of today. When he sat next to the fire with a good book reading in the evening.
Thank you.
"Transcript of the video" what video?
The video is at the top of the post...
The proof of a diagnosis is to be found in the cure. Unfortunately, modern medicine considers most diseases "incurable" even though both cure and incurable are undefined medically. Most clinical studies do not contain a definition of cured and as a result, cured cases are out of scope and cannot be documented.
To your health, Tracy, Author: A New Theory of Cure
You are spot on.
1. You cannot have 5% parkinsons or 45% parkinsons. It is 100% or 0%. So as I have found out it is pure stress/PTSD (for most people) It takes forever for people to reduce symptoms. So if they got up to 95% before they connected the dots. There is no way doctor will recognize that it is an improvement that is down to 10% symptoms.
2. If a person got free of symptoms.. They would blaim the diagnoses, not give any thoughts about the person had done something.. or stopped a stressfull life. (And if it is themself that diagnosed the person it would be shamefull to expose a wrong diagnosis
https://youtu.be/KFJYB6zCjZ0 here is one of my clients that stopped having tremor after therapy with me and got a new neurologist, that sent him to a new scanning.... and blaimed the old scanning... but he stopped having tremmor after solving a huge childhood trauma
3. They do not keep any statisic (dear x it is 3 years since last questionaire.. have you become 1) worse 2) the same) 3 improved a little 4) improved a lot.. Do you have symtoms that how big? a,b,c
Doctors are willing to say "NED," (No Evidence of Disease) but they are not willing to say cured. Cured is not even defined for many diseases. I have my own opinions about Parkinson's but I am not a doctor and I acknowledge that a cure proves the cause.
My take is. There is no cure as it is not a disease. It is people being in their instincts. That is why their symptoms vary.. It is not seldom to hear people say that they have no symptoms on vacation or linke my client of today. When he sat next to the fire with a good book reading in the evening.
well done. School need more people like you :-)