View Full Version : Bioresonance
Taurean
1st July 2013, 04:44
We're all familiar with the phenomenon of a wine glass being broken by a woman singing at a high pitch. The glass shatters when the pitch of her voice reaches the resonant frequency of the crystal structure in the glass. Bridges also resonate. Marching soldiers are ordered to "break step" when crossing a bridge in case the rhythm of their marching matches the frequency of the bridge structure and so collapses it. This principle of frequency amplification can be employed to check the long-term integrity of a variety of structures such as buildings, aircraft and pipework. A vibration of a particular frequency is propagated through the structure and the resultant 'return signal' recorded. If later vibration tests show any alteration in the return signal, that indicates a potential structural problem.
Used for medical diagnosis, MRI scanners work on the principle of a magnetic field being applied to the electron spin of a water molecule in a cell and a return signal being read. This basic technique is also used for bomb disposal. Specially designed portable MRI kits can recognise the molecular structure of a variety of explosive materials by reading the return signal. Each type of explosive has its own characteristic signal. Detonation is simple: you simply amplify the particular resonant frequency and direct it at the explosive. The resonance causes it to explode. So we now know that finding the resonant frequency of any material enables us to recognise it for what it is - be it a cell or a explosive. Furthermore, if an amplified frequency is applied to that material it will be destroyed - be it a bridge, a wine glass or an explosive.
As all structures have their own resonant signature, it is possible to identify the architecture of the cell of a virus or bacterium etc by a Resonance measuring device. It is also logical that the invading cell could be compromised or destroyed. This is the basic principle of Bicom Bioresonance therapy devices.
http://www.bioresonanz.com.sg/bioresonance.html
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I always wondered how those scanners worked on Star Trek.
Delight
1st July 2013, 14:55
Does anyone have experience with this company...Bicom, Resonance Therapy?
I am curious that skin, GI issues and neurological conditions are highlighted. I think of all these as being significant "organs" of "a brain" kind
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I recently bought a bio-resonance machine which I use for a variety of symptoms,
pain relief, relaxation, vitality and immunity...
and always with good results.
Quite amazing, actually.
It sends healthy (correct) frequencies into unhealthy body cells, which then corrects the cell's vibrational rate.
So I guess there is a darker side as well.
It would be very possible to use this method to make someone sick,
by sending wrong or disturbing frequencies at a victim, or even a group of people.
I recently bought a bio-resonance machine which I use for a variety of symptoms,
pain relief, relaxation, vitality and immunity...
and always with good results.
Quite amazing, actually.
It sends healthy (correct) frequencies into unhealthy body cells, which then corrects the cell's vibrational rate.
So I guess there is a darker side as well.
It would be very possible to use this method to make someone sick,
by sending wrong or disturbing frequencies at a victim, or even a group of people.
hi Ulli,
could you tell me the name of that machine. just curious.
thanks!
Delight
1st July 2013, 15:44
I recently bought a bio-resonance machine which I use for a variety of symptoms,
pain relief, relaxation, vitality and immunity...
and always with good results.
Quite amazing, actually.
It sends healthy (correct) frequencies into unhealthy body cells, which then corrects the cell's vibrational rate.
Hello Ulli,
are you able to say what kind of device and how you have felt...what you have noticed? Thanks, maggie
I mentioned the story on the Here and Now thread, when we first discovered it. My husband was the first to benefit. He had been suffering from what he thought was a spur under his heel...quite painful. It turned out to be a ligament issue...I can't remember the exact name. Every six month or so when he finally found the courage he injected himself with cortisone...right into the spot under his heel. It hurt a lot, but after two days gave him pain relief and he could walk normal again....for a few months.
One day in a restaurant he was sitting next to a Swiss friend who was in the process of developing this machine, together with a Hungarian scientist and a Canadian EM wave expert. She invested in this project, after spending three years studying and figuring out how one could make this available to the public, not only practitioners.
So, chatting with my husband about his condition she pulled out a tiny Acer Netbook, connected the MicroMat via USB cable, opened the program, chose the appropriate settings and placed the mat in the chair behind him. After twenty minutes it stopped. He felt nothing at the time...and being skeptical didn't give it any further thought. He is a medical doctor. General practitioner.
That evening he noticed that he was walking normally and that he was pain free. Next day, next week, next month. So when I saw my friend again I asked her how was it going. Not ready yet...But all this time my husband had no pain. Well, we were the first customers when it came on the market. She brought Gordon Johnston to our home for lunch, before he even had the MicroMat website ready.
We promised to help plug it....not involved otherwise. We receive no fee. I've not done that much plugging, except that I mentioned it once on my thread, and now.
I have a MacBook, and been having problems with the VM ware...virtual windows...can only use it when my husbands laptop is around. I'm planning on buying a windows-based netbook so I can use it more often.
Needless to say...it works like a dream. The longest program lasts 25 minutes...called mood. Which reminds me....going to run it right now...been a bit low lately, as I'm under a heavy Saturn angle.
ThePythonicCow
1st July 2013, 19:31
It's called Micro Mat.
Around $395 plus tax.
http://matrixx-micro.com/
A dear friend of mine, long since deceased now, used a transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) unit for back and muscle pain in the last few years of her life, in the 1980's. These TENS units were precursors of these present day pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMF) units such as the Micro Mat.
I am quite certain that they work, at the very least for supporting healthy tissue growth, such as healing a wound or injury, and likely in other ways, though I've not looked into that.
(Of course, if you'd rather pay more of this, here's a fine unit for $11,399: PEMF 4000 by Lemuria Technologies (http://amzn.com/B00CO9RHLU).)
Taurean
1st July 2013, 22:41
This piece of equipment is much more affordable ;-
http://www.rifedigital.com/?page_id=4
It's called Micro Mat.
Around $395 plus tax.
http://matrixx-micro.com/
A dear friend of mine, long since deceased now, used a transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) unit for back and muscle pain in the last few years of her life, in the 1980's. These TENS units were precursors of these present day pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMF) units such as the Micro Mat.
I am quite certain that they work, at the very least for supporting healthy tissue growth, such as healing a wound or injury, and likely in other ways, though I've not looked into that.
(Of course, if you'd rather pay more of this, here's a fine unit for $11,399: PEMF 4000 by Lemuria Technologies (http://amzn.com/B00CO9RHLU).)
you got a few bucks I can borrow, wise guy:)
onawah
3rd July 2013, 04:52
I've got a TENS unit and use it every day for pain from tendonitis.
I'm sure there are better things, but it was affordable (Medicare paid for it) and it's kept me from resorting to pain killers.
I'm sensitive to EMFs, even low frequencies, so that's the down side, but I don't honestly think I could cope with the chronic pain without it.
Taurean
24th July 2013, 12:00
A touch of Deja Vu I do believe ;-
X-Prize and Qualcomm Announce $10 Million Tricorder Prize
One of the indispensible tools for all of the doctors in the Star Trek universe is the tricorder - a handheld device equipped with sensors that allowed Doctors to noninvasively scan their patients, providing instant results on blood characteristics, vital signs, and other tests that can can take hours or days today. This enables Starfleet medical personnel to develop diagnoses and cures as quickly as the plot will allow.
Now the X-Prize Foundation and Qualcomm are teaming up to make a tricorder into reality by designing the Tricorder X-Prize. The winner of the prize will be whoever is able “to develop a mobile solution that can diagnose patients better than or equal to a panel of board certified physicians,” enabling basically anyone on the street to “quickly and effectively assess health conditions.”
I’ll be interested to see what the actual rules are when the prize is fully developed, because as it stands this ambitious to the point of near-impossibility. If we’re just talking basic vitals like blood pressure, heart rate, respiration, temperature, etc., wireless sensors might be able to nab all that non-invasively, and might be able to provide a very basic, “call a doctor” and provide basic first aid information.
But even if the end goal is impossible or close to it, just the research enabled by trying to get there could yield some very serious breakthroughs in mobile diagnostics, wireless sensors, and artificial intelligence. For that alone, I think this is a damn cool prize. And if someone actually develops a tricorder? Well that’d be even better.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/alexknapp/2011/05/13/x-prize-and-qualcomm-announce-10-million-tricorder-prize/
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