Photo:
A one-celled Paramecium explodes (at point of upper arrow) as it is bombarded by radio frequency. Its fluid contents spill out into the space around it (at point of lower arrow).
When you begin a search for Alternative Therapies, you discover there are dozens of techniques and approaches, some as old as recorded time, others so new no one knows anything about them. Without sufficient experience to guide you,
the choice of which one(s) to embrace can be daunting. So I'll make this simple, and tell you about which ones, to me, are the most promising of alternative treatments, ancient or modern.
Using frequencies excites me more than any other technique I know, because you can use this for nearly every health issue. It involves the application of light, sound and electrical waves, and the combined techniques are known
as Frequency Medicine.
Have you seen the commercial for Memorex where Whitney Houston or Ella Fitzgerald sings a note and the vibration of their vocal sound waves shatters a nearby glass?
The glass begins to vibrate, and if it is subjected to the broadcast of a sound wave exactly matching its own vibration rate (like 101.4 on the FM radio dial), it will shatter apart. It must be the EXACT frequency, however, as, just
like the FM radio, if your favorite station broadcasts at 101.4FM, you will get only static at 101.3 or 101.5, but clear tones will be produced at exactly 101.4.
That's neat and all that, but shattering glass won't help us overcome disease.
Albert Einstein, arguably the smartest person to ever walk the Earth, once said, “Everything in Life is Vibration.” Einstein knew that everything in the universe emits a unique frequency, and
this frequency not only effects
its surrounding environment, its energy carries on in time and space and can effect things even at great distances.
Magnetic resonance imaging equipment (MRI's), found in virtually all hospitals today, use this principle, and there are many direct applications of Einstein's discovery in frequency medicine.
The photograph above looks like a tadpole or a primitive frog. In reality, it is a single-celled organism known as a Paramecium, which has been isolated under a microscope. A frequency generator nearby has been turned on, and it is
tuned to broadcast the exact same frequency as emitted by the Paramecium.
You can easily see on the right side of the cell, at the point of the upper arrow, the cell wall rupturing. There is a discharge of cellular material spilling out of the cell (marked by the
lower arrow) into the black field around the cell.
As a result of the energy being aimed at it, the paramecium is being killed, destroyed by the energy in the frequency wave.
This paramecium could just as easily be the " super bug", methacilin-resistant Staph aureus (MRSA), the much-feared scourge of hospital patients today. Staph aureus, like the paramecium and all other organisms, has a vibratory frequency
and can be killed by bombarding it with its specific frequency.
I treated my wife with this frequency when she was hospitalized recently. A couple of days after my wife underwent surgery to repair a broken leg, another woman with undiagnosed MRSA was assigned as her roommate.
The roommate became sicker and sicker. Ultimately, they did a full laboratory work up on her and found she had developed a Staph infection. They moved her into isolation and she remained there for many days.
Meanwhile, Nancy healed uneventfully. What could have become another of those
"hospital horror stories" never became a problem because I was able to prevent the MRSA from infecting her.
So you see frequency medicine is not just about killing harmful organisms, You can use frequencies to prevent disease, strengthen your Immune System, increase your ability to concentrate, and dozens of positive, pro-active things all
of which restore and maintain better heath.
Frequency Therapy Is My First Choice Of Alternative Help for All Health Issues, Including Complex Chronic Conditions and Cancer. |
I have studied most alternative techniques, and I find the application of frequencies to be the most beneficial tool I can use. It is able to achieve positive results over an astonishing array of health issues.
Of all the maladies afflicting people today, the greatest concern, by far, is cancer. More money, more suffering, and more prayers are generated in the hope of treating cancer than anything else, so let's begin with this.
NOTE: I AM NOT RECOMMENDING ANYONE RELY ON SUGGESTIONS INCLUDED AT THIS WEB SITE TO TREAT CANCER OR ANY OTHER DISEASE. I AM NOT SUGGESTING ANYONE IGNORE OR DISPUTE THE ADVICE OF ANY LICENSED HEALTH CARE PROVIDER. I STRESS THE PURPOSE OF THIS
SITE IS TO PROVIDE INFORMATION ONLY. |
Patients have often told me, "I (or a loved one, a friend, an aunt) have cancer. Do you think I should try alternative therapies? I don't know what to do, and everybody I ask gives me a different answer."
Actually, there are but a few possible answers. Here they are:
1) If you decide to go exclusively with alternative therapy and subsequently die, the physicians (and family members) will say they could have helped, but you waited too long to come to them. |
2) If you decide to go with alternative therapy and subsequently live, the physicians will say it's spontaneous remission. The family members will say you were lucky. |
3) If you go with radiation, chemotherapy and surgery and subsequently die, the physicians will say they did all they could do. The family members will gratefully agree. |
4) If you decide to go with radiation, chemotherapy and surgery and subsequently live, the physicians (and family members) will say that proves the worth of radiation, chemotherapy and surgery. |
5) And somewhere in-between, there are stories of someone with cancer who stopped after radiation and chemotherapy, switched to an alternative therapy protocol, and died of cancer, anyway. Then the physicians
(and all the family members) will say they probably would have saved the patient if they had only been allowed to continue with the chemotherapy. |
If you get Answer #5 from anyone, here's a shocker: According to a recent Australian peer reviewed study, chemotherapy for a broad range of cancer has an average 5 year survival rate of just 2.1%! Some cancers are far more positively
responsive than others, but overall, you're looking at 2.1%.
Sorry. That is not especially impressive. Check for yourself at
Ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
So back to the question, "Do you think I should try alternative therapy, doctor?"
I tell everyone there isn't any one answer. Frequency medicine can be used as the primary form of treatment without resorting to chemotherapy. Frequencies can be used in addition to chemotherapy to ease nausea, elevate mood, prevent
secondary opportunistic infections and boost body capability to restore normal function.
With cancer, you need all the help you can get, so I truly feel there is no incorrect decision, and whatever you decide is the best decision.
If you, or someone you love and are advising has cancer, and they ultimately die, for Goodness sake, don't feel guilty.Have faith that you made the right decision; that you did all that could be done. And don't for a minute think the outcome would
have been different had you made a different choice.
Hindsight is worthless unless you can draw upon it in a future situation. No one can guarantee you success in treating cancer, whatever method you choose to treat it.
I don't want to create the impression I think medical care is insensitive or ineffective. Or that doctors don't care, or are in it just for the money. Practicing medicine is more difficult than you can imagine, and there are countless
conscientious men and women who take the life and death responsibility very seriously. They are dedicated to doing all they can to save lives, and rely on years of sacrifice, study and research to shape the clinical decisions they must make every day.
It isn't easy, and when you lose a patient, it is far harder to deal with than you would suppose. If being a doctor is what you have chosen to do with your life, losing patients goes with the territory. But that doesn't mean it doesn't hurt.
In the end, we all rely on what we are taught and what we have learned. Someone once said, "It ain't what a man knows that kills him. It's what he knows that just ain't so."
The sum total of what is taught in medical schools is not the total of what is known about healthcare. |