Science-Based Evidence for Muscle Testing as a Diagnostic Tool
A Distinction Between Consumer Curiosity and Consumer Non-Belief
There can only be two reasons why you have come to this particular page.
The first is that you have concerns about what you have read regarding the Comprehensive Biosignature Assessment (CBA), but you have a genuine interest in the possibilities that the CBA presents, and you want to know more. If that is the case, I hope that the information that I present to you is useful, and helps you to make an informed decision for yourself.
The second reason is that you and I have a different belief system. If so, it is very likely that you are a present or a prospective client who does not agree with me, which is perfectly ok. Through our conversation, I've realized that your paradigm and mine do not match, and so I've sent you here as a last ditch effort to communicate with you in a meaningful way. My hope, then, is that I will be successful in presenting a conclusive argument for the validation of muscle testing.
If you are part of the latter group, the process that we are in disagreement about is a dietary, lifestyle, or nutritional change that I want you to make as a result of your CBA exam, to which you have replied, "I think that muscle testing is nonsense", or, "That's not science", or some other statement of disbelief. To those of you who fit into this category, and who are not open to the possibility that there are things in the world that are true, even though science may not have yet proven them, I say:
You are right. It is nonsense, and this process has no value whatsoever. Furthermore, you should run away from me as fast as you possibly can, before I try to hoodwink you with more nonsense.
I make that statement not because I actually believe it, but because experience has shown me that perception is reality. Experience has taught me that if your perception leads you to conclude that what you do not understand is not scientific, then there is little that I can do to change your mind-set, regardless of the number of scientific studies that I reference. It is a fact of life that what we do not know does not exist.
That said, I will attempt to sway you with a discussion and review of literature, both web-based and printed. Some of it is scientific in nature, and some of it is simply a review of, a support for, or a refutation of general discourse.
Ultimately, to make any informed decision, one must conduct one's own research, check the validity of that information, and run checks on those checks, until a level of reasonable certainty is reached as to the veracity of the issue at hand. The level of proof that each individual needs is very personal, and I cannot influence that variable. If you are one of those people who have already made your decision, I will try and save you the time and tell you not to bother to read the rest of what I am going to say. I am not the right person to help you; you need to go to someone else.
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