What practitioners say
I have been using the technique with great success. I'm very happy with how well it works and how much easier it is on me as a doctor. Thank you so much for putting all the time and energy into developing this technique! I look forward to new developments as you discover more.
Richard Burg,DC1/25/2023, after the first class ever taught on Quick Release Technique
I found this seminar very useful. What I like about it is that the principle is easy to understand. Whether it is the neck or low back it is all the same principle, which is: we bring the patient into the most comfortable, easeful place for them, and then stimulate the appropriate spot to release the dysfunction. During this seminar I experienced, almost every time, someone then saying, “Oh that is so much more comfortable than it was!” I am looking forward to bringing this method into my clinic
Elon Bartlett, DC
It is absolutely logical and it is so easy. What is logical is that you move into easeful direction rather than fighting against the restriction, to let the body go where it feels safe and comfortable and let it release itself. And I didn’t believe it until I felt it in my own body.
Mary Ann Furda, DC
I have been using KinEase Release techniques, studying with Ethan Feldman for 3 years, and I have found it to be very grounding and clarifying for me. I do a lot of complicated techniques like PDTR, AK, and NET and this brings me back to the body, and rounds it out and makes it complete for me.
Stefan Cohen, DC
I find KinEase Release Methods very interesting because I can work with the patient in a much more individualized way for their own particular postural and alignment distortions. I find that his dural approach to the occiput and sphenoid allows the atlas to just go into alignment on its own. People with intractable headaches, head trauma, dizziness and strange pain from traumas that they have had for years: it will address it in a tremendously effective way.
Rob Ammirati, DC
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What practitioners say
I have been using the technique with great success. I'm very happy with how well it works and how much easier it is on me as a doctor. Thank you so much for putting all the time and energy into developing this technique! I look forward to new developments as you discover more.
Richard Burg,DC1/25/2023, after the first class ever taught on Quick Release Technique
I found this seminar very useful. What I like about it is that the principle is easy to understand. Whether it is the neck or low back it is all the same principle, which is: we bring the patient into the most comfortable, easeful place for them, and then stimulate the appropriate spot to release the dysfunction. During this seminar I experienced, almost every time, someone then saying, “Oh that is so much more comfortable than it was!” I am looking forward to bringing this method into my clinic
Elon Bartlett, DC
It is absolutely logical and it is so easy. What is logical is that you move into easeful direction rather than fighting against the restriction, to let the body go where it feels safe and comfortable and let it release itself. And I didn’t believe it until I felt it in my own body.
Mary Ann Furda, DC
I have been using KinEase Release techniques, studying with Ethan Feldman for 3 years, and I have found it to be very grounding and clarifying for me. I do a lot of complicated techniques like PDTR, AK, and NET and this brings me back to the body, and rounds it out and makes it complete for me.
Stefan Cohen, DC
I find KinEase Release Methods very interesting because I can work with the patient in a much more individualized way for their own particular postural and alignment distortions. I find that his dural approach to the occiput and sphenoid allows the atlas to just go into alignment on its own. People with intractable headaches, head trauma, dizziness and strange pain from traumas that they have had for years: it will address it in a tremendously effective way.
Rob Ammirati, DC
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Next