Thursday, January 28, 2010

Isaac Newton with acupuncture and self growth

Playing around with how these laws can be applied to acupuncture and self growth.
These are early thought processes I will fine tune as I continue my research.


Isaac Newton (1642-1727) 3 LAWS OF MOTION

1st Law - the law of inertia.  Every object continues in its state of rest, or in uniform motion in a straight line, unless compelled to change that state by forces impressed upon it.

2nd Law - the acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the net force acting on the object, is in the direction of the net force, and is inversely proportional to the mass of the object. F= Mass x Acceleration
ex:
F= human A= push M= train
RESULT: not go very far
F= human A= push M= marble
RESULT: goes pretty far

3rd Law - Whenever one object exerts a force on a second object, the second object exerts an equal and opposite force on the first.


My Interpretation

Acupuncture
1st law - From inertia to going to acupuncture. Perhaps due to some article, injury,symptoms or disease.

2nd law - The patient and practioner's intentions to heal.  Practioner is the force. Patient is the mass (whether choosing to be a ball and roll with things or a square which makes it harder).  The combination will be the result of the acceleration.

3rd law - Needling and intention from the practitioner will trigger a response from the patient's body.  Balances out the Qi in the body to tonify, sedate or circulate.  When the body is moving in harmony and motion, there is no pain or disease.


Self Growth
1st law - Awakening. awareness.  A Spark.  Desire to do something different.

2nd law - F = what the drive is and why the person is doing it.  If the F is big enough, the how will just happen.

3rd law - One cannot go about life alone and continue moving without support.  Therefore, a second object could come in forms of a coach, trainer, accountability buddy.  Someone who is playing at your level or higher and can exert the right force on you to constantly keep you in motion.  To stand back up if you fall off the horse.  To continue moving forward.  There's no way you can go back to inertia with another force constantly watching you.





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