If there
is a main specialty that is part of the basic NOT protocol,
it is addressing of children and adults with learning disabilities/difficulties.
A host of learning disabilities/difficulties can fall under the umbrella
of:
| • Specific
learning difficulties |
• Pervasive
developmental disorder |
| • Dyslexia |
• Cerebral
palsy |
| • ADD |
• Down's
syndrome |
| • ADHD |
• Suppression
of left brain activity |
| • Traumatic
brain injury |
• Autism
|
Think of
it this way… compare a child or adults brain to that of the
receiver and processor of a television. Lets assume that the signal
(information coming in) is of good quality, the results of the television
picture will be clear and of good quality providing the signal is
properly received and processed. The problem occurs when the signal
is not properly and optimally received and processed, that results
in a fuzzy picture. NOT will give the practitioner the protocol
and procedure to fine-tune the picture on the television so that the
signal cannot only be received, but processed at an optimal level.
NOT creates the proper physical environment that exists between
the brain, the skull, and surrounding musculature so the child/adult
can receive the incoming signal from the environment. Here’s
how…when addressing learning disabilities/difficulties, NOT
basis its approach on the concept that the bones of the skull are
misaligned as well as restricted in their normal respiratory motion.
Some factors
that produce learning disabilities are as follows:
| • Physical
trauma (blow to the head, birth process, sports injury etc). This
could be categorized as a cranial injury |
| • Chemical
trauma (allergies to food, substances, inhalants, drugs utilized
during childbirth, vaccines, etc.) |
| • Heredity
factors |
| • Emotional
factors (death, divorce, etc.) |
NOT's
theory looks like this. The bones of the skull and body carry electromagnetic
lines of force. Contrary to some beliefs, cranial bones do move, They
move ever so slightly in a collective, rhythmic and synchronous pattern
each time you breathe. There is also an internal bony respiratory
mechanism that pumps the cerebrospinal fluid up and down the spinal
cord as well as bathing the three outer layers of the brain. If these
skull bones are misaligned or tilted, parts of the brain are subject
to unequal pressure with every respiration. Bear in mind that the
average person, resting, breathes in and out about 720 times per hour.
Thus, the vast majority of learning disabilities are caused by resulting
physical manifestations, largely the abnormal movement of cranial
bones during normal respiration.
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