Blood Letting A Life Saving Method

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by maze_hmm on 01-07-2009

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KEEP A SYRINGE OR NEEDLE IN YOUR HOME TO DO THIS…….

It’s amazing that we have an unconventional way to recover victim from stroke.  Please take time to read this.  Through this you  can help save life one day.  Please keep this very handy.  You’ll never know you can use this someday.

When stroke strikes, the capillaries in the brain will gradually burst.

When this occur stay calm.

No matter where the victim is, do not move him/her.  Because if moved, the capillaries will burst.

Help the victim to sit up where he/she is to prevent from falling over again and then the blood letting begin.

If you have in your home an injection syringe that would be the best.

Otherwise, a sewing needle or a straight pin will do.

1.    Place the needle/pin over fire to sterilize it and then use this to prick the tip of all 10 fingers.

2.   There are no specific acupuncture points, just prick about an mm from the fingernails.

3.   Prick till blood comes out.

4.   If blood does not start to drip, then squeeze with your fingers.

5.   When all 10 digits is bleeding, wait a few minutes then the victim will regain consciousness.

6.   If the victim’s mouth is crooked, then pull on his ears until they are red.

7.   Then prick each earlobe twice until 2 drops of blood comes from each earlobe.

After a few minutes the victim should regain consciousness.

Wait till the victim regains his/her normal state without any abnormal symptoms then take him to the hospital.

Otherwise, if he was taken in the ambulance in a hurry to the hospital, the bumpy trip will cause all the capillaries in his brain to burst.

This blood letting technique in managing stroke is from a Chinese Traditional doctor, Ha Bu Ting, who lives in Sun Juke.

Furthermore,  here’s a practical experience by a Chinese professor who was teaching in Fung Gaap College in Tai Chung way back 1979.

One afternoon when she was teaching a class, her co-teacher came running to the classroom telling her that their supervisor had a stroke.    She immediately went to where the supervisor was and saw him pale and with slurred speech.    His mouth was crooked - basically all the symptoms of stroke.

She immediately asked one of the practicum student to go to the pharmacy outside the school to buy a syringe, which she used to prick the victim’s finger tips.

When all 10 fingers were bleeding, after a few minutes, Mr. Chen’s face regained its color and his eyes returned to normal also.

But his mouth was still crooked.  So she pulled on his ears to fill them with blood.   When his ears became red she pricked this twice to let out 2 drops of blood.

When both earlobes were already pricked, his mouth returned to normal and his speech became clear.

They let him rest for awhile and gave him a cup of hot tea.  Then he was userred down the stairs and drove him to Wei Wah Hospital.   He rested one night and was checked out the next day and returned to school to teach.   Everything worked normally.

There were no ill effect on that blood letting procedure.

If we can all remember this blood letting method, we can revive a victim and regain 100% his normal state.

Our Hands

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by maze_hmm on 28-06-2009

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I have here something that interest me a lot.   Through our hands we can tell what kind of a person are we.  For me,  it is very true.  Try to look at your hands and check what is the shape and  read the corresponding meaning as written below.   It’s really interesting to know more our personality.

The Pointed Hand

This hand is characteristic of its delicacy and grace. It has an almond shape where it is wider and round at the base and narrower as you move up towards pointed fingers. The thumb may also be long and flexible. The hand is often pale in colour, and the lines are often shallow.

  • Less of a doer, appreciates art and beauty.
  • Typical occupations include, hair-styling arts, cosmetic industry.

The Square Hand

This hand is smooth and firm. The palm is usually as wide as it is long, and it has a fairly square base. The fingers also have a square nature, and they can be short or long, and smooth and knotted. There tends to be few lines, however deep and clear.

  • A balanced and earthy person, solid values and energy, materialistic and practical.
  • Typical occupations include, successful business men who often use their hands.

The Coned-Shaped Hand

This hand is characteristic of its tubular fingers and smooth round base. It is broader at the base and tends to be fairly flat as well. Tapers a bit. Wavy lines.

  • A philosopher, inventive and creative, interested in theory as well.
  • Typical occupations include, educators, lawyer and artists.

The Spade-Shaped Hand

This hand is characteristic of its square base. The base is also narrower than the top of the palm. Displays knotty fingers, as well as fairly broad and square.

  • An inventor, a do-it yourself type of person, great manual dexterity.
  • Typical occupations include, engineer, decorator, mechanic.

The Mixed Hand

This hand is at first difficult to point out, they also do not simply represent a mixture of the other types of hands. The has a mixture of shapes, where it is square at the base of the thumb and oval or rounded at the heel. The fingers also have diverse characteristics. Some knuckles may be smooth in some areas and knotty in others.

  • A generalist whose personality combines creativity and practicality.
  • Typical occupations include, journalists, teachers, and researchers.