This is a letter written by Joanne R Boyer about her work with Timothy Hurst using Quantum-Touch. Jennifer and I have designated this "Story of the Month". Keep 'em coming.
"My partner and I have seen a spontaneous remission of primary liver cancer in a patient who was told she had 3 months left to live. That was 2 years ago. We have seen a spontaneous remission of breast cancer. I have used it in asthmatic flair-ups. We have seen reversal in the deformities of rheumatoid arthritis. We have used it in the treatment of panic attacks with success. We have used it on a client with incapacitating history of migraine headaches. We have a client who canceled her scheduled back surgery after being treated with Quantum-Touch. Soooooooo, yes, I can name people who have been 'cured' of serious illness. Utilizing it in the operating room as a nurse anesthetist, with physiologic monitoring in place, I can give you oodles of documentation of the effectiveness of Quantum-Touch. This is one of the latest of my adventures. I was giving a fellow anesthetist a break recently, and the surgeon was 2 hours into trying to fix a tibial fracture that would not reduce. The OR nurses know first hand of my abilities, and smiled when I went into my 'voodoo' mode. Doing a vector anaysis, I noted that the femur was also affected by the tibial fracture. By utilizing Quantum-Touch , the tibia realigned itself under fluoroscopic visualization to the amazement of the surgeon and the radiology technician. The returning anesthetist just smiled and nicknamed me 'Dr. Bombay' after the character in Bewitched." -- Joanne R Boyer, RN, BSN, CRNA, MEd -- Timothy Hurst, BA, BPhil, DMS
In many cases extreme conditions resolve themselves quickly and dramatically. Professional clinicians often have the best perspective on how amazing QT is while casual practitioners may not have a wide enough base of experience to be as awe struck and astounded by the seeming limitless potential of this work.
The surgeon said...'I don't know what you're doing, but keep doing it.' The OR nurses just laughed, and the X-Ray technician had to pick her jaw up from the floor. (That was the first time she had seen me 'in action.') Joanne