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38 NaturalLifeNews.com • Natural Life News & Directory
CJ Puotinen
Trapped emotions—The term
makes sense, doesn’tit? Sometimes itseems as though old, often painfulmemories are stuckinside of us.
That’s whatBradley Nelson,D.C., realized yearsago in his chiroprac-tic practice. Most of his patientsimproved after conventional chiro-practic adjustments,but some did not. Afterdiscovering the therapeuticeffects of magnets, he found that many who still felt awfulimproved after he ran a magnetover affected joints or muscles.But there were still a few who didnot respond to either treatment.
This frustrated Dr. Nelson,who searched for other tech-niques that might help. One day it occurred to him that thepatient he was working on had atrapped emotion, an emotion thatinterfered with the body’s energyflow, and that running a magnetdown the patient’s spine mightrelease it. This simple procedureworked, and thus began Dr.Nelson’s discovery of theEmotion Code.
Dr. Nelson describes trappedemotions as spheres or balls ofenergy the size and shape of atennis ball to a grapefruit, andthey can be anywhere. You might
have anger from an event at age16 stuck in your left shoulder or sadness from seven years agotrapped in your right ear. Dr.Nelson estimates that most adultshave 350 to 400 trapped emo-tions, so it’s no exaggeration tosay that our bodies are full ofthem.
What they do, he explains, is interfere with our health andhappiness by disrupting our flowof energy or chi. Whenever wecan identify and release trappedemotions, even if it’s only a fewat a time, we can feel better allover.
Consider Marsha Greene of Columbia Falls, Montana. “I discovered the Emotion Codethrough my chiropractor, Dr.Julie Schleusner, in 2011,” sherecalls. “At the time I was look-ing at spending the rest of my lifein a wheelchair with two auto-
immune disorders anddiabetes. TheEmotion Codewas the catalyst
I needed to boostmy health. I wasdealing with somuch negativityand stress in mymind that I hadnothing left toembrace health.”
Followingher recovery,Greene became a certifiedEmotion CodePractitioner. “I love how the
Emotion Codeexpanded my life and of those I have had the honor to workwith,” she says.
Sonora (who doesn’t use alast name), moved last year fromOregon to Bigfork, Montana,with a similar history. “I hadspent three and a half years inbed,” she explains, “taking pre-scription drugs which only keptmy brain foggy while my bodystill hurt. I wasn’t ready to spendthe rest of my life that way so I turned my attention to alterna-tive methods.”
One of the methods she discovered was the EmotionCode. “I am happy to say that I am out of bed, regaining myhealth and energy, and feeling somuch better.” Like Greene, shebecame a serious student of theEmotion Code and then a certi-fied practitioner. Many of herclients experience significant
The Emotion Code & Trapped Emotions
pain relief along with emotional improvements.
Greene enjoys all parts of the Emotion Code butis especially interested in the heart-wall. “When thiswall of protection is released,” she says, “you canhave the health, success, and relationships that you have been withholding from yourself. That’sexciting!”
The life of Bigfork resident Nan Potts revolvesaround horses. An Equine Body Worker who offersriding lessons, evaluations, and training, she becameinterested in the Emotion Code three years ago andcompleted practitioner certification in 2013.
To become certified as an Emotion Code practi-tioner, one takes an online course, several quizzes,and a final exam before documenting multiple one-on-one practice sessions with a minimum of 30 different clients, at least four of which have to be animals.
“My first practice session,” says Potts, “was with a two-year-old filly who was training with myhusband, Lyle, and me.With a halter on, she wasa quiet little angel, butwhen she was loose andwe had to catch her, shelaid her ears back, baredher teeth, and was down-right wicked.”
In that first sessionthey released a few emotions, then left to doother chores. “We cameback two hours later,”she says, “and the fillycame straight to the gateto meet us, gentle as canbe. Lyle and I just lookedat each other, and fromthat moment on I washooked.”
At first, Potts workedprimarily with horses,but now her EmotionCode practice involveshumans, too. “Emotionscan be so painful,” shesays, “yet most peoplefocus on physical painand try to fix that with-out considering the pain’s
underlying emotional factors. Incorporating theemotions with a method like Emotion Code, whichis easy to understand and use, completes the cycleof cause and effect.”
While there are several ways to use the EmotionCode, the basic procedure uses kinesiology muscletesting to ask someone’s subconscious mind (thusbypassing the conscious mind) for informationusing “yes” and “no” questions. Armed with a chartshowing 60 emotions, the practitioner finds a spe-cific emotion and then helps the client figure outwhen and where it came from. Once identified, theemotion is released by running a magnet along theclient’s governing vessel, which is a key meridian orenergy path that runs over the forehead and top ofthe head to the neck and down the spine. Running amagnet anywhere along this meridian releases theemotion.
As Dr. Nelson explains, “Most people say theEmotion Code helps them feel lighter and more
free, but we frequentlysee the disappearance of major health and emotional issues, too.Releasing trapped emotions can helprestore balance to yourbody, enhancing yourbody’s natural healingability. This means youwill be better able torecover gently from your ailments and gain a stronger immune system, too!” �
Marsha Greene,Sonora, Nan Potts, andother Montana EmotionCode practitioners willparticipate in a freeEmotion Code Mini-Conference in Helena onSaturday, February 21st,from 9:00 a.m. to Noon.For information, visitTapTheWorldEFT.com,email [email protected], or call (914) 523-3063. (See ad on back cover.)
39January–February 2015