Seeds for Change Wellness
Healing with Electromedicine and Sound Part 2
Healing with Electromedicine and Sound Part 2
by Nenah Sylver, PhD Towsend Letter April 2008
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Part Two
EM Radiation: Rife Frequency Healing
Rife frequency healing is named after its inventor, Royal Raymond Rife. After this technology was
enthusiastically embraced by some of the most prominent physicians and scientists of the 1930s
and 1940s, it was driven underground by the pharmaceutical interests and the American Medical
Association (AMA). Only in the last couple of decades has Rife technology emerged again in
popularity, albeit in an altered form.
Royal Rife was born in Nebraska in 1888. Educated in the fields of optics, electronics, biology, and
chemistry, he studied at Johns Hopkins University and had two years of training to perform eye
surgery and six years of training with optical scientist and researcher Hans Luckel (who worked for
German-based company Zeiss Optics). Rife designed and built many medical research instruments
including spectroscopes, optical tools, micromanipulators, and stop-motion photomicrographs.
However, one of his most famous inventions was the 200-pound, 5,682-part Universal Microscope,
which stood between two and three feet high.
During Rife's time, specimens had to be killed and stained in order to be seen under a microscope.
Even modern electron microscopes, which produce high-resolution images, kill the specimens
being viewed, because in order to make the specimens visible, an electron microscope bombards
them with electrons in a vacuum. Completed in 1933, the Universal Microscope allowed
microorganisms (even tiny viruses) to be viewed in their live state with crystal clarity. This held
great promise in finding cures for diseases, because if you can see how living organisms respond
to stimuli, you may find a way to destroy them.
As it turned out, this "stimuli" from Rife consisted of frequencies produced by an EM field. If Rife
exposed a virus or bacterium to a particular frequency and the pathogen began to vibrate – and
then either grew weak or completely broke apart – Rife knew that he had found the resonant
frequency (or, simply, frequency) of the microbe. "Any object has a certain natural or resonant
frequency," explains James L. Oschman:
Strike it, bump it, pluck it, or heat it, and it will tend to vibrate at a specific frequency. This applies to
a bone, a piece of wood, a molecule, an electron, or a musical instrument....In the living body, each
electron, atom, chemical bond, molecule, cell, tissue, organ (and the body as a whole) has its own
vibratory character [as well]....In terms of vibrations, the human body can be compared to a
symphony orchestra. Each molecule corresponds to a particular instrument. Each bend, rotation,
or stretch of a chemical bond has a certain resonant frequency, and will give off certain "notes" if it
is energized. Since molecules, water, and dissolved ions are constantly bumping into each other at
body temperature, all parts are constantly jiggling and absorbing and emitting energy....When two
objects have similar natural frequencies, they can interact without touching; their vibrations can
become coupled or entrained. For electromagnetic interactions between molecules, the word
"resonance" is used more often than entrainment. In the older literature you will find the term
"sympathetic vibrations."1
The microbe's frequency (the number of cycles per second at which it vibrated) was also known as
its Mortal Oscillatory Rate (MOR). An analogy explaining how Rife's ray tube worked was the cliché
of the soprano who shatters a glass with her pure, focused tone. If enough power were applied, the
resonant frequency killed the microbe or debilitated it enough so that the body's own immune cells
could then dispose of it.
Royal Rife's ray machine (whose inspiration and fundamental operation appear to have come from
Albert Abrams's Oscilloclast) delivered frequencies in the Radio Frequency (RF) range by sending
an electrical current through a tube filled with noble gases (mostly argon and neon). The gas would
light up the tube, and the frequencies were emitted as EM radiation. It was the EM wave, rather
than the luminescence from the light, that disabled or killed the pathogens. Rife discovered the
resonant frequencies for cancer, typhus, E. coli, and other microorganisms. People given "terminal"
diagnoses by their doctors would often become well when exposed to Rife's ray tube. A microbial
MOR frequency administered at a low power level is harmful to a microbe but does not harm a
larger host such as a human being or animal because the host has a much more complex structure
than a microbe – and, hence, will barely feel the power input that can kill a tiny microbe.
Many modern, second-generation "Rife machines" also contain plasma tubes filled with noble
gases (though some Rife-type frequency devices utilize hand-held, tubular metal electrodes to
deliver frequencies into the body via electrical current). Most of the tubes are freestanding; one
unit has long glass rods that are held. Due to technology changes – and FCC regulations against
devices transmitting over long distances in the RF range because they interfere with radio
broadcast signals – today's units emit much weaker signals in lower ranges, mostly from one to
20,000 hertz. The advantage of freestanding light tube over electrode devices is that many people
can receive a session at the same time. Also, some people prefer being able to engage in activities
that leave their hands free, rather than having to remain in one place holding onto the unit.
Rife technology devices can range from simple to elaborate, with varying programming capabilities.
Smaller units can be the size of large loaves of bread, while large ones equal the size of tower
computers. The user inputs the desired frequencies into the computerized machine, and a signal is
sent to the noble gases in the tube. The resulting EM field disables or kills the microorganisms in
the body, while also inputting energy into the body's cells as well. Frequencies are selected from
the pre-programmed channels, from lists on the Internet, or from various print sources (including
this author's Handbook of Rife Frequency Healing).
In countries outside the United States, such as Germany and Romania, Rife technology is seriously
researched and publicized. Its legal status as a medical treatment means that the technology is
freely used in clinics and doctors' offices. In North America, open-minded medical practitioners and
health seekers have a more difficult time finding manufacturers of Rife frequency devices, because
after the 1940s, the FDA quashed this technology. About a dozen manufacturers in North America
are making Rife-style devices. In Europe, there are even more companies making frequency
devices.
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