Читать книгу The Edgar Cayce Handbook for Health Through Drugless Therapy - Harold J. Reilly - Страница 29
Case 1030
ОглавлениеAnother paralysis case was that of a twenty-eight-year-old woman with paralysis of an arm. An operation had been advised by a number of doctors. When the woman questioned Cayce about this, he replied in a reading for her that an operation would be harmful rather than helpful.
The treatment for which he referred her to my institute was as follows:
. . . general massage . . . over the whole of the system, specifically in those areas along the cerebrospinal system, following some heat (not too great a heat) from a sweat and a rubdown.
The general massage, following the sweat and shower and rubdown would be with oils, preferably for this body combined in this way and manner: to 4 ounces of Russian white oil as the base, add—in the order named—
1 ounce olive oil;
1 ounce oil of wintergreen;
½ ounce of compound tincture benzoin; and
1 ounce of rosewater.
Then would follow a rubdown with grain alcohol (not rubbing alcohol, but grain alcohol). This would be along the cerebrospinal system and over the abdomen, and especially across the diaphragm area.
Such a treatment would be given about four times each week for three weeks, then rest from same for a week and a half to two weeks. Then it would begin again. (1030-1)
Later the woman wrote Cayce, “When Dr. Reilly gave me my first therapy, he was sure (he told me later) that I was going to have a nervous breakdown. Now I’m so much better that he doesn’t fear that any more.”—H.J.R.
The above cycle of treatments was to be alternated during the rest periods with diathermy treatments given twice each week:
We would have the diathermy treatments; that is, the electrical forces to make for the stimulation to the body itself in the areas as indicated by the massages.
And we should find, by the second or third period or round of these treatments, these conditions will be almost entirely eliminated. (1030-1)