Traumas cause functional weakness to the body part involved, as well as to the body as a whole. Traumas confuse the nervous system: the brain spinal cord, meninges and nerves. The nervous system forgets what 'normal 'is, until 'normal' becomes abnormal and abnormal becomes normal for the traumatized person.
Internal body traumas cause the most referred pain. These traumas commonly involves the organs, glands, nerves, brachial and lumbar sacral plexuses, spinal cord, brain and the vascular system of the arteries, veins and venous and arterial capillaries. Internal traumas are the cause for most of the external body pains especially in the muscles and/or the joints.
It is important to identify the existence of all past traumas. This can be done by mentally scanning the entire body. You can start from any point in the body.
Or you can scan for traumas by beginning at the top of the head. Check each part of the body, scanning the left side, the right side, the front and the back. Scan the head: the left and right sides, face back of the skull, various points on the skull and facial area. Scan the torso: the front, back, left side, right side, rib cage shoulders, etc. Scan the lower extremities: the waist, hips, legs feet and toes.
Move from larger parts of the body to more specific regions on the body surface. You can physically touch the trauma-affected areas and get a weak response in the muscle test, or you can scan mentally, without touching, for faster results.
Birth Trauma
Possible traumas occur even in the womb. From clinical experiences, I feel fetal traumas are more responsible for birth defect than genetics. Birth trauma occurs because any birthing process can be traumatic. It can be due to the inadequacy of the mother's readiness of the child's developmental capability.
The trauma can cause weakening effects to the head, spinal cord, brainstem or spinal column. Such damage can lead to abnormal curvature of the spine resulting in idiopathic scoliosis. Childhood traumas can add more imbalance and weaknesses which can make the existing conditions worse or also lead to scoliosis.
Surgical Trauma
Surgical trauma occurs whenever a surgical procedure is performed on the body, no matter how minor it may seem at the time.
Dental traumas specifically weaken the cranium. Keeping the mouth open for the duration of a dental procedure can traumatize the inside of the mouth, tongue gums and facial muscles, leading to TMJ.
Scar Tissue Weakness
Traumas cause scar tissue; scar tissue replaces the normal tissues, causing weakness in the body. Scar tissue accumulates more calcium than normal tissue, which leads to calcification in those areas. Calcification of the scarred tissue, in time, leads to ossification of the tissue.
Ossification is more rock-like and harder than calcification and must be corrected before trying to correct calcification. Both of these conditions can be corrected using the Lymphatic System. Make sure all components of the lymphatic test strong to ensure that the entire system is working properly.
After both ossification and calcification are energetically corrected, scarred fibrous tissues need to be removed through the Lymphatic process using the same corrections.
Adhesions
Adhesions are damaged fibers and tissues that have not yet developed into scar tissue. Adhesions are less entrenched than scar tissues. They can also become calcified or ossified. Clear ossification first, then calcification and then the adhesion itself through the lymphatics.
Any trauma weakens the energy in the affected area of your body. By touching that area, or having the person who experienced the trauma move or stimulate the area, the person's energy field will weaken. This weakness will show up in a muscle test and it will show up mentally.
Remember that whatever you do physically can be performed mentally. Mental processing is a lot faster and more efficient than doing it physically.