
Learn to perform facial diagnosis and map body organs from facial signals, monitor treatment progress, and interpret signs with a respectful, gentle approach.
Explore the chemical composition of the human body, from major elements to minerals like calcium and iron, and how small amounts can have a big effect.
The heart acts as the body's pump, circulating blood to oxygenate and nourish tissues in a continuous cycle.
Explore how the lungs oxygenate blood, detox carbon dioxide and chemicals, and defend the body with mucous membranes and cilia that trap debris and support immunity.
The stomach acts as a reservoir that receives food, digests it into chime, absorbs starches, sugars, and alcohol, and expands to release digestive juices, protected by a thick mucous membrane.
Explore the pancreas' dual role in digestion and hormone production, including insulin and glucagon's regulation of blood sugar, energy management, and storage.
Explore the spleen's blood-centered roles in producing and storing red and white blood cells and platelets, filtering blood, and its links to digestion and energy in holistic health.
The liver digests fats with bile, stores glycogen, and detoxifies excess hormones while supporting red blood cell and protein production; a high-fat diet strains its energy.
Identify the gall bladder's role in facial diagnosis: the liver continuously produces bile, the gall bladder concentrates it, and releases it into the duodenum to digest fats.
Explore the small intestines from the duodenum after the stomach, where pancreatic and liver juices digest food into chyme, then absorb nutrients via a narrow canal that increases surface area.
Explore the large intestines—ascending, transverse, descending colon, sigmoid, and anus—and how peristalsis moves waste, water is absorbed, and gut bacteria digest insoluble fibers to produce gas.
The kidneys filter blood to remove toxins and waste, support liver detox by bearing the load, balance water and minerals, activate vitamin d, produce erythropoietin, and the bladder stores urine.
Explore how the pituitary gland, the master gland, coordinates thyroid, adrenal, and gonads, while the pineal, thyroid, thymus, pancreas, and adrenal glands shape sleep, metabolism, immunity, and stress.
Explore face mapping by starting with the hair, linking hair thickness and early greying to kidney energy, and assess the thyroid through neck creases, fat deposits, and skin tags.
Explore facial diagnosis of the bladder and pelvic organs by examining the forehead and chin, linking urine, nutrients, and signs like pimples, redness, discoloration, and wrinkles.
Explore how forehead and mouth areas reflect small intestine health, signaling nutrient absorption, potential allergies to foods, and signs of malnutrition, chronic imbalance, and the brain's nutrient prioritization.
The eyebrow area corresponds to the gall bladder, which concentrates bile for fat digestion. Pimples and oily skin, plus temple headaches, signal gallbladder imbalance, looped meridian around the ear.
Explore the lines between the eyebrows and their link to the governing meridian and emotional blockages. Examine how liver, spleen, and pancreas energy affect emotions, digestion, and energy flow.
Explore how eye-area signs reflect kidney function, including puffiness from mineral and water balance, and blue under-eye color signaling anemia or iron deficiency.
Observe how dark blue or brown discoloration at the inner eye corners indicates adrenal fatigue, chronic stress, and hormone imbalance.
Identify liver stress in the eye area, such as dark brown discoloration and coarse dry skin linked to toxins, digestion, and liver detox functions. Support kidneys before any detox.
Track how the bridge of the nose, cheekbone, and lips reveal stomach acidity and blood flow, signaling dietary intolerance to high carbs and sugars.
Map heart health signs on the nose and earlobes, noting pimples, redness, veins, lines, and pale lips or nails that signal stress, high blood pressure, weakness, or chronic heart conditions.
Cheeks reveal lung health through redness, inflammation, immune or autoimmune responses, and blue veins, reflecting oxygenation and respiratory and cardiac circulation issues tied to pollution or smoking.
Explore how the large intestines relate to the lips and mouth lines, reflecting colon health through pimples, redness, and inflammation, with waste, sugars, and potential irritable bowel syndrome.
Examine the upper lip indicators in facial diagnosis, linking deep line patterns to unresolved issues and trauma, and connect stress, hormonal balance, and gut health to reproductive system well-being.
Explore how the jawline and chin reflect hormonal balance, pelvic floor health, and thyroid status, with pimples from high sugar and intestinal acidity and neck lines signaling thyroid strain.
Facial Diagnosis, or Face Mapping, is a diagnostic tool that can be used by health practitioners of all kinds to help narrow down their diagnosis, or do a quick analysis of the patient’s state of each organ and general health before even beginning a treatment or even asking the patient or client what might be wrong.
Remember, you can never diagnose a disease, diagnosing a disease can only be done by qualified doctors. You will however be able to diagnose which organ is experiencing a dis-eased state, a state outside the parameters of a healthy state.
Course content:
In this course you will learn the very basic function of each organ in the body (should you have physiology behind your name you can skip this section)
We will have a very quick look at the organ emotion chart and see which organ is affected, or affects, which emotion.
You will be able to map the face and understand which area on the face is linked to which organ in the body.
Facial Diagnosis (also known as Face Mapping) has helped me every time to see which organs in the body needs help first, and by treating the organs that need help first, the other symptoms they patient or client is experiencing will be easier to treat later on in the treatment regimen.
I hope you enjoy the course.