Archive for July 31st, 2009

Electromedicine Energy Healing Introduction

From ancient times to now, the human ingenuity has led to a long history of using and experimenting with the unviversal power of energy and electricity to benefit our health.

The ancient Greeks from over 2,000 years ago used electric eels for healing. More recently, the American Electro-Therapeutic Association in the late 1800s began recording the therapeutic uses of electricity and electrical devices by doctors and patients.

From then to present day, electromedicine energy healing has continued to evolve with the most important advances being made in the last 50 years with monumental advances in technology and electronics.

The following highlights:

  • The Language of Energy
  • The Body’s Electric Energy
  • Electromedicine Uses
  • Electromedicine Benefits
  • Early Pioneers
  • Electromedicine Advances

The Language of Energy

The language of energy, or frequency is depicted in the Energy Spectrum; it represents a range of energy frequencies; frequencies from a few cycles per second to several million cycles per second.

Low frequencies, for example, describe the electrical energy of brainwaves. Sound vibrates at a few hundred cycles per second; radio waves at a few thousand per second; and light at several million cycles per second.

There is a very broad range of frequencies from sound to light. Color is a specific light frequency within the electromagnetic spectrum. The electromagnet spectrum is infinite and continuous. With electromedicine a combination of energy is used from this spectrum for healing.

The Body Is Electric

The body is part electrical; the body’s nervous system is an intricate bioelectrical system. The nervous system is used to control the functioning of the entire human body via a combination of both electrical and chemical functions.

The nervous system has two primary parts: the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system. The central nervous system is the control center comprising the brain and the spinal cord. The peripheral nervous system represents the nerves connecting other parts of the body to the controll center.

Every cell in the body is part of an intricate bioelectrical system that contributes to the body’s health.

Electromedicine Uses

Electromedicine is used for many body conditions including serious and degenerative conditions, which include:

  • Immune system disorders
  • Chronic fatigue
  • Fibromyalgia
  • Autism
  • Lyme disease
  • Most Cancers
  • Infections
  • Pain

It is also used by athletes to improve athletic performance (strength and endurance) and to speed recovery from workouts and injuries.

In addition, electromedicine is used for most chronic or catastrophic disorders including but not limited to:

  • Digestive disorders
  • Headaches
  • Pain from disease, surgery, injury etc.
  • Bladder infections & disorders
  • Heart disease
  • Tumors
  • Spinal cord injuries
  • Muscle healing
  • Re-flowing nerve paths for nerve regeneration and healing
  • Harmonic balance of brain energies
  • Mood Disorders

Electromedicine is used as an alternative method for healing, and importantly, it is complementary to most other healing protocols. Many have used electromedicine to get over the side effects of surgery and prescription drugs, including chemotherapy and radiation.

Electromedicine Benefits

As noted in the Townsend Letter:  February/March 2008 On Electromedicine:

“Unlike drugs, each of which can be used only one time by one person and for just specific conditions, the many electromedicine modalities that have emerged in the last century are:

  • Effective
  • Non-invasive
  • Enhance the body’s innate ability to heal
  • Easy to use
  • Utilized long-term over the course of a lifetime
  • Used with more than one person in a family
  • Relatively inexpensive, considering their range and scope.”

Early Pioneers

Nikola Tesla – in 1895 discovered alternating current and invented the AC generator, published many papers, and invented numerous electrical devices including Tesla coil therapy instruments.

Alexander Gurvich - in 1922 discovered waves named “biophotons”, “mitogenic”, and “mitotic”. His work became the basis for the design of later bioelectromagnetic therapy devices after being the first to document evidence of “biophotons.”.

Georges Lakhovsky – in 1925 invented the multi-wave oscillator, which produced a spectrum of electrical frequencies that restored cell equilibrium in the body, and published a paper in “Radio News” magazine titled “Curing Cancer with Ultra Radio Frequencies.”

Royal Raymond Rife – in the 1930’s demonstrated how his frequency research and mitogenic impulse-wave technology could cure cancer.

Ed Skilling – in 1959 California Cancer Doctors commissioned Ed Skilling to apply “space-age” electronics to these historic works by some of these earlier pioneers. As Senior Electronics Design Engineer for General Dynamics for 17 years, Ed Skilling supervised approximately 1,000 of the brightest electronics enegineers in the world.The first instrument he developed got better results than anything in history and he has been number one in the world since 1959.

Electromedicine Advances

Ed Skilling founder of The Skilling Institute has been recognized as the “genius” in this field and now has 50 years of research and development with his latest instrument the Photon Genie.

The current and most advanced technology, the Photon Genie, communicates with the cells of the body utilizing thousands of frequencies and millions of harmonics formulating the subtle life energy that transmits balanced “life-force” energy at the cellular level of the body.  This healing power or energy to the body’s immune system makes it stronger. It also reflows nerve paths and empowers the body.

Today’s Photon Genie by Ed Skilling represents significant advances in electromedicine beyond the early pioneers and is helping to significantly improve the health and quality of life of many.

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Are you Interested in Experiencing Lucid Dreams?

Dreams that you have where you know they are dreams and control the final outcomes of the dream are called Lucid dreams. These are the type of dreams where you pick the subject or the person they are about and make the dream come out the way you want yet you feel like you are fully awake, similar to day dreaming.

Your Lucid dreams can be a fantasy, adventure or mystery. Anything you want. There are no limits to what you can experience!

The difference between normal dreams and lucid dreaming is that you control the lucid dream, where normal dreams may wander randomly from subject to subject. You may even have to pinch yourself because they can seem so real versus normal dreams that may be strange, abstract and sometimes scary.

One way to make sure that you are dreaming is to attempt reading a book or paper. If you are dreaming your words are sure to change and make reading impossible. If you can’t read then it’s a lucid dream.

There are times that you like someone and want to be with someone. However, it might not be possible in reality but it is definitely possible in a lucid dream. You can even date and marry a Hollywood star in a lucid dream.

In lucid dreams you can decide the kind of events that can happen. Let’s say you are dreaming that you are with a person you desire to be with. In your dream that person can smile at you and even touch you. In fact in your dream, that person can do anything you want him to do!

Because your body has a biological need to sleep, your mind can remain in a semi-conscious state while your body is resting, which is what makes lucid dreams physically possible.

Lucid dreaming needs some techniques which can be learnt by some practice and patience.

A good way to start is by trying to recall your dreams. Describe the images, from your dreams as vividly as you can. You can keep a pad and pen or pencil by the bed or lounge chair. Keep them handy so you waste no time jotting down your images clearly. If you don’t remember everything, don’t worry. When the dream repeats its self and it will, you will have an opportunity to finish recording it. Do this technique with all your lucid dreams and you will have a record to use as a reference.

Lucid dreaming is a great tool for writers. You can actually dream about all the characters, the plot and the way you want your story line to move. You can use lucid dreaming for expressing all your dormant desires and manifesting them in reality.

You can sometimes continue the dream where you left off, if you wake up, recall everything you can about your dream, and go back to sleep. Lucid dreams have been found to have a pattern, so chances are you will be able to recall more each time as it reaches a conclusion to your liking.

If you happen to wake up in the wee hours of morning, which is the perfect time to have a lucid dream. It may feel as if you were really awake and thinking but it was in reality lucid dreaming.

Soon you will be surprised at how easy it really is to do. One short cut you can try is to use self-hypnosis; it can help prepare your mind to recall vividly your lucid dreams.

Another quick way of experiencing lucid dreams is to use a modern technique known as binaural beats. This involves using unique frequencies to synchronize the hemispheres of the brain which will automatically put your brainwaves in a frequency which corresponds to the state of lucid dreaming.

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