On/Off Strong/Weak Loves me/Loves me not

Strong…..Weak… Strong…..Weak….Strong…0101010101010101010?!?!
Feeling the difference between strong and weak is not as simple as it looks. How do we feel the difference between strong and weak?  Shouldn’t it be obvious? 

This is the one of the first questions I hear from people when they are learning Dr. Yuen’s technique. I’ve seen some of the best go down under the pressure too—everybody from medical intuitives to ministers.  Even a few health food store owners have been known to crumble.

Seriously folks, I used to ask this question a lot and I still ponder it on occasion. At least I’m past the point of lying in bed at night with my hand on the midline for hours— toes pointing in, toes pointing out, toes in (strong), toes out (weak). During the day, I’d stand or sit and do the same drill. Toes in/Toes out.

In the beginning, the method seemed so foreign to me. Feeling strong/weak was different from anything I’d ever tried. There were times when I got discouraged and even ashamed not to get the feeling of strong and weak right away (very weakening emotions those two).

It’s just that I not only expected to be able to do everything right away, I figured I’d be great at it! Stupendous! The best in the world!

I’m so psychic and so intuitive and so in touch with my feelings and all the psychological reasons behind each and every one of them. I’ve delved so deeply into my childhood traumas—dug them out wth relish and dissected every small detail of parental abuse, uncovered every reason for self loathing, purged the religious dogma from every last thought process… only to find that nothing had really changed. After all those years of delving nothing had really changed.

Pause.

Surprise, surprise! Being psychic only complicated ‘strong and weak’. And my intuition…well let’s just say it was too gunked up to feel much of anything, much less anything as neutral and pure as strong and weak.

So here I am, further on down the road. I have to smile when I think about strong and weak. How can we not feel strong and weak? It’s around us every second of our lives. I think those feelings are so much a part of our daily routine that we just don’t recognize them any more.

I mean, don’t we make countless decisions every day based on what we think is strong or weak? Don’t we make some feeble attempt to compare these two principles, consciously or unconsciously, every time we make a big decision for our families, our finances, our careers, our health? Aren’t we constantly comparing stuff?

Actually, comparison is still a good way to do it.  So back to the basics: Toes in/toes out. Hand on the midline, hand off. Circle the wagons, uncircle the wagons.

Too basic for some of you? Try this, then. Take a concept you are sure is strong and compare it to one you are positive is weak.

How about war and peace? (Careful now).

War and peace—-two basic concepts that seem obvious in their effect.  Right?  Tarzan say, “ Peace Strong. War Weak!”

(Not so fast, all you tarzans out there.) Is peace always strong?

Peace can feel every bit as weak because it brings up or triggers its opposite. Or peace can feel weak because you are motivated to action by battle. Or peace can feel weak because you believe you have some debt to pay to the karmic society of spirits.

In the Yuen Method, we make ourselves strong to both—-Strong to war and strong to peace, so that neither causes a weakness in us—us being our body mind spirit triad. If this general correction doesn’t work, we look for that programmed memory, such as the time we broke a peace treaty with Geronimo. (just a random example)

That’s why the Yuen method is so amazing and creative. It doesn’t presuppose the answer to any question. It tests the answer with intuition—-at first someone else’s intuition is preferable, then you can use your own—-after it’s been de-bugged and de-gunked, of course, with Yuen corrections.

In other words, after Dr. Yuen uses a simple correction to separate your intuition from the other mental and spiritual functions of the body mind spirit (BMS) triad, along with the dead weight of accumulated negative emotions, you are on your way big time.

And what a lighter way it is!

Here’s the thing, folks. Getting the answer to strong and weak is not based on what you think the answer should be, or what you feel ahead of time the answer should be, or what anyone tells you the answer should be, or even what the spiritual teaches say the answer is—it’s based on what the answer truly is for you, or tests to be.

Let your mind formulate one question at a time and then shut it off. Teach your mind to share time with your intuition. At first your mind won’t want to. It may even pile question on top of question or argue its case. (Don’t shut me off, Laura, you need me, Laura, you can’t learn anything new.)

Shut that mind up, folks—- Give your intuition a chance to connect with the answer. That’s what intuition was born to do—connect with answers. The answers are out there. Let your intuition test your answers for strong and weak without any interference from the logical part of your mind. It will thank you later down the road. (Thank you, Laura. Thank you , Laura.)

Your mind might try to get back into the act, though, by making something pop up into your head real quick. Now don’t be fooled by the first thing that pops in your head—it’s not necessarily in your head ‘cause your intuition found it. Rather than always going with the first thing that pops in your head, you’d probably be better off pulling petals off a flower like the loves-me loves- me-not game till you get down to the last strong or weak petal.

Yea, that’s what I said—pulling petals off a flower is better than going with the first thing that pops in your head.

Before too many flowers get plucked in to an early grave, though, let’s hear someone else’s ideas about strong and weak. How about yours?

Laura signing off with happy feet: toes in toes out toes in toes out….


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