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GEORGE GOODHEART

A chiropractor by training, Goodheart has spent the past 40 years manipulating muscles not just to alleviate aches and pains but also to diagnose and treat diseases

The Man with Magic Fingers
By Janice M. Horowitz

A meat-eating Republican who wears a coat and tie everywhere, including at the breakfast table, George Goodheart wouldn't seem to have a New Age bone in his body — until you get him talking about bones and muscles.

Like his father before him, Goodheart, 82, was trained as a chiropractor. But then, nearly 40 years ago, he began to focus not just on skeletal structure but also on the hundreds of muscles that support the bones. He thinks of them as the body's ambassadors — engaged in a constant, lively communication with the rest of the body. He developed a system, known as applied kinesiology, in which the muscles and surrounding nerves are manipulated not only to alleviate ordinary aches and pains but also to diagnose and treat organic diseases.

Linking muscle dysfunction to diseased organs is not entirely out of the mainstream. For years doctors measured thyroid function by testing how fast the tibial muscle jerks when the Achilles tendon is tapped. But for Goodheart, muscle testing is the diagnostic gold standard. He prods and palpates patients head to toe, searching for tiny tears where muscles attach to bone. These tears feel, he says, like "a bb under a strip of raw bacon." When "directional pressure" is applied, the bb's flatten, and slack muscles snap back, their strength restored.

And that, says Goodheart, may help strengthen a weakened organ. Goodheart believes that muscles and organs are linked by the same invisible neuropathways and meridian lines tweaked by acupuncturists. It took

 


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PHOTOS: Jeanne Achterberg by MOJGAN B. AZIMI FOR TIME
Jean-Pierre Barral by SERGE PICARD/AGENCE VU FOR TIME
Tieraona Low Dog by MICHAEL LEWIS FOR TIME
George Goodheart by STEVE LISS/GAMMA FOR TIME
John Upledger by BRIAN SMITH FOR TIME
Patricia Walden by JONATHAN SAUNDERS FOR TIME
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