Hello, NinG,
No, you aren't imagining it, bones move. Most of the time I don't feel them
moving, but when checking "before" and "after," it's very clear those bones
have moved. There have been times, though, when there was NO doubt
because I have felt them move under my hands.
The most recent time this happened was when I was visiting my family in
N. Carolina, and I was working on my niece, who, like me, is an R.N. My
hands were on her sternum, chasing pain caused by coughing very hard
during a bout of bronchitis. Neither of us moved, not a muscle, not a hair,
and suddenly there was a big "bump" (Helloooo!!!!) Under my hands, a
movement occurred that was so startling, it caused both of us to jump. She
was lying motionless across the bed at the time, eyes closed, deeply
relaxed, and I was seated on a bench beside her, well-supported, so I did
not jerk or startle while running the energy.
The sternum does not have a large range of motion, although it does move
with respiration, of course. It's attached to ribs and clavicle & is
anatomically very well-supported, so whatever caused that hard "knock-
knock" bump remains a mystery.
The soreness in her chest from the hard coughing was gone at the end of
the session. She was nonplussed by it, and said to me "What the H***
WAS that????" I had no answer except to say "Well, when you expect a
miracle, sometimes you get one."
So -- Expect miracles! Blessings to you...Ali Get Started With QT Now >
No, you aren't imagining it, bones move. Most of the time I don't feel them
moving, but when checking "before" and "after," it's very clear those bones
have moved. There have been times, though, when there was NO doubt
because I have felt them move under my hands.
The most recent time this happened was when I was visiting my family in
N. Carolina, and I was working on my niece, who, like me, is an R.N. My
hands were on her sternum, chasing pain caused by coughing very hard
during a bout of bronchitis. Neither of us moved, not a muscle, not a hair,
and suddenly there was a big "bump" (Helloooo!!!!) Under my hands, a
movement occurred that was so startling, it caused both of us to jump. She
was lying motionless across the bed at the time, eyes closed, deeply
relaxed, and I was seated on a bench beside her, well-supported, so I did
not jerk or startle while running the energy.
The sternum does not have a large range of motion, although it does move
with respiration, of course. It's attached to ribs and clavicle & is
anatomically very well-supported, so whatever caused that hard "knock-
knock" bump remains a mystery.
The soreness in her chest from the hard coughing was gone at the end of
the session. She was nonplussed by it, and said to me "What the H***
WAS that????" I had no answer except to say "Well, when you expect a
miracle, sometimes you get one."
So -- Expect miracles! Blessings to you...Ali Get Started With QT Now >