Jenene Lehman has completed the application, and is in the process of negotiating a testable protocol for her claim.
Lehman states that she is able to tell if an individual is suffering any kind of physical imbalance, which would include an injury or chronic illness, or pain.
Since detecting an "imbalance" is not conclusive, we asked Lehman if she could match the chronic illnesses individuals suffered from to the series of imbalances she found within an individual. For example, if we presented her with an individual who suffered from migraine headaches, would she know it was migraine headaches (if she was given literature on the problem) by noting that the imbalances were mostly in the head?
She agreed to this protocol. We asked her if she would be able to tell individuals who had Pacemakers, metal plates in their heads, or bone screws by the location of those imbalances, and she wasn't sure.
Lehman states that she does not need to touch an individual to detect the imbalances, and that all subjects may be under thin cotton sheets during the process. However, the process can take up to half an hour for each subject.
Because of the length of time involved, we began working out ways to limit the scope of the search for imbalances, and are considering a protocol that uses lancets, like those used in diabetes bloodsugar tests, to prick the fingers of participants.
The fingers would then be bandaged, and Lehman would have to search for the imbalance to determine which had been pricked.
More information on whether this protocol will work for Lehman will be available soon, so stick around for updates!
~Remie
Lehman states that she is able to tell if an individual is suffering any kind of physical imbalance, which would include an injury or chronic illness, or pain.
Since detecting an "imbalance" is not conclusive, we asked Lehman if she could match the chronic illnesses individuals suffered from to the series of imbalances she found within an individual. For example, if we presented her with an individual who suffered from migraine headaches, would she know it was migraine headaches (if she was given literature on the problem) by noting that the imbalances were mostly in the head?
She agreed to this protocol. We asked her if she would be able to tell individuals who had Pacemakers, metal plates in their heads, or bone screws by the location of those imbalances, and she wasn't sure.
Lehman states that she does not need to touch an individual to detect the imbalances, and that all subjects may be under thin cotton sheets during the process. However, the process can take up to half an hour for each subject.
Because of the length of time involved, we began working out ways to limit the scope of the search for imbalances, and are considering a protocol that uses lancets, like those used in diabetes bloodsugar tests, to prick the fingers of participants.
The fingers would then be bandaged, and Lehman would have to search for the imbalance to determine which had been pricked.
More information on whether this protocol will work for Lehman will be available soon, so stick around for updates!
~Remie