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©iStockphoto.com/David
Elfstrom
Editor's
note: This is the second article in a series on the medical implications
of energy. Read the first article here.
In the last article, we discussed energy
sources in general terms, describing vibrational frequencies and
the interactions between the currents of all kinds that flow around
and through us. Today I want to propose some thoughts that may seem
outlandish, but I’m going to try to explain in terms that
will make the concepts more clear. Here’s a revolutionary
thought:
All healing
takes place at the energy level.
Let’s look at some commonly accepted
energy tools that are in use today in the practice of medicine.
Interestingly, a number of these have been in use for decades,
and their reliability is unquestioned for diagnostic and healing
purposes. But putting two and two together, we’ll move on.
Years ago, a researcher discovered
that the heart gives off electrical waves that can be measured.
The healthy tissue in a patient gives off a very specific pattern.
Stressed or dead tissue gives off a distinctly different pattern
from the healthy tissue. The resultant recordings of those waves
we know today as an electrocardiogram, or EKG. An EKC is a powerful
diagnostic tool; it picks up the specific electrical changes in
the heart’s waves when anyone being tested is having a myocardial
infarction (heart attack), or has had one in the past.
An electroencephalogram (EEG) is capable
of determining normal and abnormal brain waves, to the point that
probable sources of seizures can be diagnosed because of abnormal
electrical signals given off in the brain.
We have also discovered and labeled
different waves per second (delta waves) have a frequency of 1-3
waves per second, called Hertz or Hz, which is seen in people in
deep sleep. Theta waves have a frequency of 4-7 Hz, which is seen
in different stages of sleep, and with emotional stress. Alpha waves,
at 8-14 Hz, are seen in the alert state. Finally, beta waves, 14-50
Hz, are present when there is intense mental activity.
A magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI,
is a machine capable of interpreting normal and abnormal responses
of tissue to magnetic energy, from which an image can be extracted.
Spectroscopy is a laboratory diagnostic tool that can identify a
specific substance based on the frequency that it gives off. This
frequency is measured and placed on a graph. Every substance gives
off a different frequency, which can be used to identify the substance.
Tuning Forks
Have you ever seen a “tuning
fork” in action? When musicians or other individuals strike
a tuning fork, the fork gives off a vibration that creates an exact
sound frequency. If another tuning fork at the same frequency or
an octave interval of that frequency is near, it will resonate with
the same vibrations — you can actually see it vibrate.
Guitarists or other string instrument
players often notice the same effect in tuning their instruments
— if one player plucks the string of his own instrument, the
second instrument’s strings will vibrate.
Occasionally we will meet a person
with whom we seem to be “in tune.” This merely means
that we are operating on a similar vibrational frequency. Spanish
speakers would call that “simpatico,” or being in harmony
with another. The Beach Boys made the concept even more musical
(or less, depending upon your musical taste) with their famous rendition
of “Good Vibrations.”
Ultrasound is a tool in which sound
waves are released, and as the waves bounce off tissue and return,
the subsequent feedback can be interpreted by a machine and create
an image. There are PET scans, and SPECT scans, which can differentiate
healthy tissue from diseased tissue by the energy characteristics
that are given off.
We have many other tools in medicine,
including auditory-evoked response, visual-evoked response, myograms
and oculograms, all of which tell us whether that particular tissue
is normal or abnormal, based on its measurable electrical output.
There are also many therapeutic tools
or modalities in medicine. One of the first was pulsed electromagnetic
field (PEMF) therapy, which releases specific low frequency,
electromagnetic pulses to stimulate bone healing in non-healing
bone fractures. Lithotrypsy has laser focused frequencies that are
capable of breaking down kidney stones.
Many of us have heard of or used light
therapy for depression, called seasonal affective disorder (SAD).
Acupuncture is recognized within the medical field for its effectiveness
in pain relief, which is based on centuries’ old energy flow
lines called meridians that flow throughout the body. There are
also cold and hot laser therapies, which have been used in the healing
of wounds and skin disorders.
The Energy of Electricity
Outside of the medical field are many
energy and electrical devices that are in common use. For instance,
the computer chip in your computers, or the remote controls that
send frequencies to television sets, radios, light switches.
Even though we don’t understand
electricity, we have become accustomed to using lights and other
things that need electricity to function. We even accept energy
emissions from billions of light years away that are obtained through
our telescopes.
Gravity, much misunderstood, is a force
that attracts objects from a distance to the center. A polygraph
machine is capable of sensing electrical changes at the skin level,
which differentiate a relaxed state of the parasympathetic nervous
system and the anxious state of the sympathetic nervous system to
determine the stress in peoples’ bodies in answer to specific
questions.
This background is merely useful for
opening up our minds to the concept of how much energy and frequencies
and magnetics and electrical devices are influencing our lives today.
We take these things for granted, whether or not we understand them.
In order for us to recognize the potential
impact of energy and frequencies on the body, we’ll start
by understanding how individual cells function in our bodies. That
will be in our next article. For now, let’s recap the different
energy tools and sources we’ve reviewed today:
In the medical field:
Electrocardiogram (EKG)
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
1. Theta waves
2. Alpha waves
3. Beta waves
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
Ultrasound
1. PET scans
2. SPECT scans
Auditory-evoked Response
Visual-evoked Response
Myogram
Oculogram
Pulsed Electromagnetic Field Therapy (PEMF)
Lithotrypsy
Light Therapy
Acupuncture
Cold Laser Therapy
Hot Laser Therapy
Outside of the medical field:
Computer chips
Remote controls
Light travel visible through telescopes
Gravity
Polygraph machines
Cell phones
Ipods
Internet
Telephone wires
It might be interesting to take a walk
around your house or office and observe the number of devices that
utilize energy from known and unknown sources!
I have enjoyed the many questions and
comments you are sending to my blog site, www.drstangardner.com.
Please keep them coming, and I’ll do my best to answer them
or locate an answer for you. Be patient also, please, until I can
get to all of them. More next time!
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