Human Soundcheck: The Whole Human Approach
Most people are trying to fix symptoms.
But symptoms are signals—
and if you don’t understand what your body is telling you, you stay stuck.
This podcast is for people who are done guessing.
Hosted by holistic health therapist and B.E.S.T. practitioner Jamie D., Human Soundcheck breaks down what’s really going on beneath the surface—so you can feel better, be at your best, and actually thrive.
We talk about:
- Why your body isn’t responding the way it should
- The real role of supplements (and when they actually matter)
- Stress, anxiety, and the nervous system
- Gut issues, sleep problems, hormone shifts, and metabolic function
- Emotional interference and how it shows up physically
This is a whole human approach—
body, mind, and the patterns driving both.
No trends. No noise. No guesswork.
Just clear insight, practical tools, and a better way forward.
Human Soundcheck: The Whole Human Approach
Mud Packing: Clearing Interference in the Body
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Sometimes there’s a stubborn pattern in the body that doesn’t fully resolve—and that’s what this episode is about.
In this episode, Jamie D. dives into one of the newest therapeutic tools integrated into the Human Soundcheck practice: mud packing.
This isn’t spa mud.
And it’s not some trendy detox gimmick.
The mud and mineral compounds Jamie uses in practice come from Premier Research Labs, the same company she trained with on this therapeutic approach.
Jamie breaks down how localized interference in the body—old injuries, scars, surgical sites, injections, chronic irritation, and stagnant tissue patterns—may disrupt the body’s communication pathways and contribute to stubborn, unresolved issues. Using muscle testing as an assessment tool, she explains how these interference patterns are identified and addressed in practice.
This episode explores interference fields, tissue irritation, energetic communication, fascia, and why symptoms don’t always show up where the actual problem is.
Jamie also shares personal experiences, observations from her practice, and why this old therapeutic technique has become an important part of the work she does today.