Believe it or not, the human body is consistant. The only difference is not in note, but in beat. This is very hard to explain. It's called ocsillation. If you change the speed at which the note vibrates you can match the system. There are sliders available for tuning forks to increase or decrease the speed of vibration. =z= The novelist, journalist and psychologist Michael Zangari http://zangarijournalism.com
----- Original Message ---- From: Nenah Sylver <nenahsyl...@cox.net> To: silver-list@eskimo.com Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2008 10:12:08 AM Subject: Re: CS>Sciatica Michael, You doubtless already know that every organ, gland, tissue in the body has its own resonance, or electromagnetic radiation signature. If you brought down this EM radiation by many octaves, that radiation would be in the acoustic range of the human ear, and we would be able to hear this radiation as notes. (Actually, the EM radiation emitted by healthy tissue would be more like musical notes; while the radiation emitted by unhealthy tissue would be more like disharmonic sound.) Electromedicine, then, is similar to sound therapy: you have to know how to use it properly. When taking amino acids, you want to make sure they are in balance. If someone is deficient in some amino acids and not others, you want to know which ones, so you can bring the person back into balance. The same holds true with B Vitamins. Taking only one or two B Vitamins exclusively in supplement form will unbalance the others. My question is, how do you know that Dianne's system isn't already resonating too strongly in C# or G#, or in C and G? Nenah ================================== ----- Original Message ----- From: Michael Zangari To: silver-list@eskimo.com Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2008 12:01 PM Subject: Re: CS>Sciatica I use the tuning forks on the nerves themselves. You don't need to do much. The body vibrates itself. You can always thwack the fork on the thigh before placing it on either side of the neck on the nerve itself. That might be painful for some. It is relaxing to me. As I mentioned, the actual fork you need is a C# and G#. But the C and G work as well. I will also use the forks on the head, the foot or any other place I can trace the nerve. It's fun for me. You start and the root and see where the nerve does not vibrate. That's the place where the problem is. A good anatomy book helps. ____________________________________________________________________________________ Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home page. http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs