
The Essence of XK; Extreme Kinesiology
XK is the extreme use of kinesiology. It is not another diagnostic system, although
it contains one. XK is kinesiology turned
back on itself.
Instead of using a predefined protocol, XK
practitioners “log on” to the body’s “biocomputer” and ask it to create its own
protocol. By connecting directly with the Innate Intelligence that runs,
maintains, and heals the body, XK gives the final authority on all aspects of
treatment back to the patient.
XK allows the Innate Intelligence of the Body to
Direct Every Aspect of Its Own Treatment on Its Own Terms
Innate Intelligence
Many, if not all, philosophies of health include the
concept of an “innate intelligence” that exists within the body. This Innate
Intelligence is the life force that animates the body while it is alive, and
enables the body to adapt to a constantly changing and often toxic environment.
If something is happening in the body, the Innate is responsible for it. It is
brilliant. The Innate always knows exactly what it’s doing. We usually don’t.
The Innate can be thought of as that aspect of the
divine that lives within us. It is the Innate, and not the practitioner, that
heals the body. When we trust it, we get miracles. When we get in its way, we
get lessons.
In XK, we use kinesiology to communicate directly
with the Innate Intelligence that is responsible for the ongoing state of the
entire body.
Kinesiology
The term, “kinesiology”, as it is used here, refers
to the use of manual muscle testing to measure the body’s response to just
about anything. This extraordinarily useful phenomenon was first discovered by
Dr. George Goodheart in 1964.
Kinesiology is a tool that can enable a practitioner
to literally “ask questions” of a patient’s body.
The quality of the information obtained through
kinesiology is, of course, determined by the quality of the questions that are
asked. One can ask virtually any question that has a “yes” or “no” answer.
Attempts to organize all the possible ways of doing this into manageable
frameworks have led to the wide array of systems of kinesiology that are seen
today.
Diagnostic Systems of Kinesiology
Many specific protocols (or “systems”) have been
devised by health practitioners to make effective use of kinesiology. These
systems vary widely in terms of scope and complexity. A current directory of
the known “kinesiologies” is maintained by Kinesiologists United. Kinesiological systems are basically
algorithms that help practitioners decide what to ask the body at every step in
a treatment. The actual muscle testing procedure varies little between these
different systems. The big difference
between these systems is in the thought processes represented by each
algorithm. Each system represents a unique set of assumptions, which, more or
less, “maps” the way the Innate Intelligence supposedly organizes information.
These systems are necessary because we are not as
smart as the Innate. We cannot understand every aspect of what is going on in
the body in each moment. Only the Innate can do that. There is too much
information for the conscious mind of the practitioner to process. Choices have
to be made. Everyone is different. Different practitioners have their own unique
styles that include the kinds of therapies they test, what they consider to be
important, and where they stop “asking the body” and start making assumptions.
The more a given system happens to reflect the
actual way a particular patient is “organized”, the better the system works for
that patient. Some kinesiologists master many different systems in order to be
more successful with a wide variety of patients. Whenever practitioners learn a
new system of kinesiology, they are able to help more of their patients than
they were before, often because the new “system” is organized more like these
patients are than the old one was. This is particularly obvious in the case of
“difficult” patients, and results in flowery, almost miraculous testimonials
for the superiority of any given system of kinesiology.
XK enables the Innate Intelligence of the patient to
create it’s own unique protocol on the spot.
Development of XK
Applied Kinesiology (AK), Dr. Goodheart’s original
method of using muscle testing in diagnosis, allowed licensed doctors to get
feedback directly from the body of their patients.
Clinical Kinesiology (CK) introduced biocomputer
concepts that allowed doctors to investigate how the body processes
information. For more on CK, see CK Online.
HoloDynamic Kinesiology (HDK) introduced holodynamic
systems theory and an entry procedure that enables doctors to “log on” to the
body’s computer system and ask it what it wants. (For more on HDK, see
HDK.Info.) Extreme Kinesiology (XK) uses
a modified holodynamic entry to ask the body what it wants from a specific
practitioner, allowing practitioners of any healing art to be able to use these
concepts to go beyond the limitations of whatever they are already doing.
XK Overview
In XK, the Innate Intelligence of the patient
chooses where to start, how much to do, and when to stop. It decides how each
technique is to be done or modified. It even decides when it will be time to
come back.
XK basically involves these elements:
A holodynamic entry to connect with the patient and
ask the body what it wants before any muscle testing is done. An elegant way of using kinesiology to
translate what the body has answered.
An absolute dedication to making certain that no
unnecessary assumptions are made.
A complete respect for the sovereignty of the Innate
Intelligence of the individual patient and its unparalleled knowledge of what
the body needs.
Holodynamic Systems
The human organism is both “holographic” and
“dynamic”, it is holodynamic. In “holographic”
systems, each part contains information about the system as a whole, much like
in a hologram. (For more on this, see
The Holographic Universe)
“Dynamic” systems are those that are constantly
changing, and are often so complex that they are just beginning to be studied
by the new branches of science related to complexity and dynamical systems
theory. (For more on this see
Complexity)
Holodynamic systems share properties with holograms
but they are also complex and constantly changing. When we do something to such
a system, we affect the system in ways that can be unpredictable, even
theoretically. This is why much of
medical diagnosis has to rely on statistical methods. It would be impossible to study a system as
complex as the individual patient using traditional medical methods, so groups
are studied and statistics are employed to approximate what an individual might
need under different circumstances.
Scientists who study complex systems have found that
the future behavior of these systems cannot be predicted accurately from how
they have responded in the past. These complex systems can only be studied,
experienced, and influenced in the moment.
Complexity
In order to find out what a complex system will do
in any given situation, one actually has to stimulate or perturb the system and
watch what it does. This is not always practical, especially when studying
things like storm systems or human beings. The way these scientists get around
this problem is by creating a model (usually a computer simulation) of the
system they want to study.
Models
A model is a usually simple version of the complex
system it represents. If a model is very
accurate, one can perturb the model and watch what the model does, instead of
having to perturb the actual system. The science of complexity is, however,
still in its infancy. No one has yet come up with a program that even comes
close modeling the behavior of the entire human body.
Fortunately, they don’t have to. Each body already
has a model of its own system, accurate in every detail, stored holographically
in its nervous system.
The “Blue Body”
Unlike computer simulations, the model we access
with XK is not derived from the system being studied, but is actually the
“blueprint” for it. The model is the inherent energetic pattern held
holographically in consciousness within the Innate Intelligence that acts as
the observer to collapse the quantum wave function of the body into mass in
each moment. It can be thought of as an
energetic “blue body” superimposed within the physical body.
As a purely energetic system, the blue body responds
instantly to fluctuations in the energetic fields in which it is embedded. As a
manifestation of consciousness, the blue body responds to thoughts as easily as
it responds to other energetic sources of information. Because it controls the
physical body, the responses of the Innate Intelligence can be read using
muscle testing.
Energetic Information
Once the blueprint of the body has been accessed
using a holodynamic entry, it no longer matters whether we test a physical
substance, a “hand mode” representing a substance, or the thought of a
substance. These are all just energetic patterns of information to the Innate,
and they all do the same thing. They resonate with the model energetically and
allow it to respond. When we know what the model does in any given situation,
we know what the body will do. It’s that simple.
The Concept of Entry
An “entry” is simply a way in which a practitioner
gains access to the information in a patient’s information processing system.
It is the starting point that sets up the initial assumptions that determine
how information can come up during testing. Many systems of kinesiology start
with a “problem” (a symptom or complaint) or a “problem area” of the body, like
an active reflex point or “point of reference”. They don’t necessarily realize
they are doing “an entry”. The
holodynamic entry used in XK is done consciously.
The Holodynamic Entry
The idea of a systemic entry (one which takes the
whole system into account) made the development of holodynamic kinesiology
possible. Such an entry actually allows the Innate to create its own protocol
that specifies exactly how it wishes to be treated in the moment. This makes it
possible to study the body in much the same way as chaos theorists study other
complex systems.
A most ingenious thing about the holodynamic entry
is that it asks the Innate its question before any kinesiology is ever done.
This enables practitioners to ask open-ended questions that don’t have
“yes”/”no” answers. It frees them from having to start with problems or reflex
points or points of reference. By the time any kinesiology is done, the answer
is already there, on display in the electromagnetic field of the patient. Any
form of kinesiology can then be used to determine exactly what the answer
already is.
The holodynamic entry used in HDK essentially asks
the Innate Intelligence of the patient, “How would you like to be treated in
this moment?” Because the Innate can ask for anything, practitioners of HDK
must be doctors who are licensed to do anything that might come up. This entry
has been modified for use in XK. The Extreme Entry allows practitioners at all
levels of training to be able to use these powerful tools with their patients.
The Extreme Entry
The holodynamic entry used in XK has been modified
(by permission of The Order) to allow the concepts of HDK to be used by anyone
who wishes to apply them.
Instead of asking, “How would you like to be
treated?”,
The XK entry essentially asks, “How would you like
to be treated by me?” This subtle difference, makes
worlds of difference. The XK entry asks the Innate Intelligence of the patient
to prioritize its wishes with respect to the capabilities of the specific
practitioner doing the entry. In this way, the body only asks for treatments
that the practitioner knows how to give (or is willing and able to learn) at
that moment. Once the entry has been
done, any system of kinesiology that is sufficiently unlimited can be used to
interpret the result, provided tthat every step is questioned
XK Questions Everything
A modified form of the protocol used in HDK is
taught with XK, but any muscle testing system can be used once the entry has
been done, as long as everything is questioned at every step in the process.
The answer is already on display. In XK, we only use a kinesiological protocol
to determine what the body’s answer already is.
The XK practitioner tailors every aspect of treatment to the exact
specifications supplied by the body. Even when an extremely familiar technique
comes up, the XK practitioner asks, “Is there anything else I need to know?”
The Innate supplies any missing details and can modify any known therapy to
better meet the body’s own needs in the moment.
The XK entry insures that therapies come up in the order in which they
are to be done, and that the entire situation is re-evaluated after each part
of a treatment is completed and before the next portion can be requested. XK treatment continues until the Innate
ceases to request further therapy. The
patient is encouraged to walk around or stress any areas of complaint to make
certain that changes made during treatment have stabilized and that nothing
else is required before the patient is released. Practitioners even ask the Innate to estimate
when the body will be ready for further treatment.
XK Training
XK Training is done in intensive hands-on small
group workshops. There is usually an initial three-day workshop and a one-day
follow-up several months later. Videos of the pilot XK
workshops taught by Dr. William C.
Gustafson are currently being edited and may become available in the
near future.
XK training is made possible by an arrangement
between Kinesiologists United and The Order. Members of Kinesiolgists United
will be notified when future training or videos are available. If you are not
yet a member, you can join Kinesiologists United here. It’s free. If you have any further questions about XK,
you can contact one of the practitioners listed here, or contact us directly.