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Smells can make your Memory Better

Some years ago my parents made a special
party for my friends and their parents. It was
my fifth birthday and I can still remember how much
fun it was. I was so excited! I received two special
gifts from my parents that I loved. A new wristwatch
with Roy Rogers picture on it and a big bottle of cologne
that smelled just like the one my dad wore.

After the kids went home the adults stayed to have their
own party and I was able to stay up late for the first time
I could ever remember. But the rule was, “I could be seen
but not heard.” I was bubbling with excitement about my new
gifts and kept asking my mother if I could say something,
I wanted everyone to smell my new cologne and hear my watch tick.
She said, no! Repeating the rule, “Kids are to be seen and not heard”
I wanted to tell everyone about my new presents, but my mother kept
telling me if I wanted to stay up until 10:00 O’clock she didn’t
want to hear a peep out of me. She said, “It’s now the adult’s time.”

Well, I kept bugging her until she agreed that I could say
something about my gifts and then I had to go right to bed.
I announced to everyone in my loudest voice.
“If you hear anything, or smell something, it’s ME!

“Smell is a potent wizard that transports us across
thousands of miles and all the years we have lived.”

— Helen Keller

Sometimes we are so wrapped up in our thinking and
activity that we have lost touch with our senses.
The ol’ factory sense of smelling will bring us quickly
back to a moment in time. Remember the smell of cookies
baking in the oven around Christmas and the smell of the
pine trees? It brings us right back to those childhood memories.

Many of us have lost the scene of sensing as our
memory fades, but it can be recovered. In face You
maybe able to recover some long forgotten memories
if you set an intention to be aware of smells.

Focus on your nose awaken to its sensitivity.
In Chinese medicine the nose is related to the
lungs and large intestine and if unbalanced it
will leave you with the feelings of sadness and grief.
As you smell more consciously, let go of your judgment of the Aromas.

Don’t label smells good or bad; simply experience
them for their individual qualities. Smells can
restore old memories. The positive emotion of the
lungs is valor and courage. When I first stood up before
a large group and started teaching the Recharging Qi Gong
Exercises, I first did my deep breathing exercises to open
up my lungs to bring in the emotion of courage to move forward.
I encourage you to start every morning with deep breathing
like the percussive breathing.
The 36 exercises in the Recharging Qi Gong program will open
up your breathing for good, transform sadness and grief into
Valor and Courage.

“When you start using senses you’ve neglected, your reward
is to see the world with completely fresh eyes.”

-Barbara Sher

I wish you the best in your Health, Wealth and Happiness

Dr Wu Dhi

PS
You can still get on the program today by
Ordering now:

http://www.rechargingqigong.com/recharging-qi-gong.html

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Dr. Wu Dhi has been a pioneer in alternative health care for over 30 years and a master of Medical Qi Gong. Dr. Wu Dhi completed his advance studies in neurology under the direction of Professor Sun at the prestigious Heilongjiang, University of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Harbin P.R. China.

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