Please take me off your mailing list
Thank you
----- Original Message -----From: elaine.thompson@...Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2008 2:30 AMSubject: Re: [biosonic] Re: Fw:Interesting info on light therapyHi There Marysol!
Yes, I am interested in the article about what ultra sound does to the DNA. Can
you send it to me?
Blessings,
Elaine XXXXX
PS if you see mail that comes with e.thompson369 @btinternet.com, thats me....I
had a small problem with the server!
On my way to USA next week for 3 months but will be on email and skype XXXX
> Thankyou Kate, thankyou Marcelo,
> I cannot get through to your emails directly, it seems that my server
> has problems and does not deliver some of my messages. now...
> I did receive your emails and will write to you from another email
> meanwhile I fix this problem.
>
> Anyway,, I wanted to say that this is nothing new to me about SunLight,
> Ultraviolet, Infrared and about Infrasound and Ultrasound too...
> Alzeimer´s is due to lack of ultrasound and lack of communication in
> DNA,, ultrasound is needed for brain activity and communication... as so
> many degenerative diseases.. and in the cities we have no ultrasound and
> the motors and low sounds constatly are draining out all sound or
> ultrasound coming form the harmonics of the birds. Music and
> microphones are taking away harmonics now too. That i discoverd with the
> dolphin sessions,, and that is the reason to be with dolphins it is
> rejuvenating,, there is an article about what ultrasound does to DNA,,
> in www.biosonic.org therapy manual,, i just realized that it is one of
> those pages that are not in the website,, but anyone who wants it I will
> send it to them,,, i cannot send it through here unless I take the
> graphics,, but I can do that too, if anybody asks and is interested.
> then all this about light has been known for a long while, maybe now the
> are paying more attention to it...
> But just imagine many types of radiation directly from the sun is still
> unknown, that is why it is so powerful the ocular light treatments i do
> with prisms, and I decide the missing color from the voice,, but the
> decission is not as simple as the missing note related to the missing
> color, it is so powerful the therapy that we need to do it in a clinical
> setting with therapists and doctors around,, and staying to sleep in the
> same place.. I have done that in the past and will start doing it now.
> I also now know where I can make here in Spain, huge quartz crystal
> prisms, cost a fortune, but for radiation on the body we need a few
> minutes of really UV pure light, and this only comes out at the end of
> the violet of the spectrum with quartz prisms I have design....
> I am now in process to create the Foundation Soliris to process all
> these studies.. so this is the first time I am telling this forum,,, in
> the next year or so all the students of my method will have ample work
> to do with me and we will be able to prove some of these things about
> sound and light. The study of the sun will be most needed, sunlight for
> human health, water and plants, will be the study goals of this foundation.
> I hope some persons from this forum could start to get interested in
> studying with me through internet.
> there is much new information in my blog
> http://ONDAdeFORMAdelaVOZ.blogspot. even if the name is in spanish,,com
> all the info is in both languages, english and spanish.
>
> love
> Marysol
>
>
> Kate Marks escribió:
> > -----Forwarded Message-----
> >
> >> From: VoiceAnalysis@cs.com
> >> Sent: Mar 17, 2008 5:59 PM
> >> To: VoiceBio@yahoogroups.com
> >> Subject: [VoiceBio] University acknowledges we are beings of light
> >>
> >> Frontier science at the University of Sunderland has begun to confirm what
>
> >> many pioneer scientists have long understood: that we are beings of light
> >>
> >> Dr Gordon Dougal recently raised eyebrows after holding aloft a helmet and
>
> >> claiming that the light emitting from it would cure Alzheimer's disease.
> This
> >> extraordinary claim derives from research at the University of Sunderland,
> in
> >> North East England, showing that regular exposure to low levels of
> infrared
> >> light-at 1072 nm, a wavelength found naturally in sunlight-can improve
> learning
> >> ability. Low levels of infrared light, such as we receive with simple
> exposure
> >> to the sun, can restart the brain's cognitive function among people
> considered
> >> beyond the reach of modern medicine.
> >>
> >> Dr Dougal is the director of Virulite, a medical research company based in
>
> >> Newton Aycliffe, in County Durham, and has pioneered a treatment approach
> that
> >> uses a lightweight helmet that is designed to deliver this frequency of
> light
> >> at regular intervals. He is now ready to take the concept one step further
> by
> >> initiating trials that will use the light helmet to treat dementia
> patients,
> >> who will be required to wear the helmet for 10 minutes each day. Dougal
> got the
> >> idea of regenerating the brain through his work with machines that use
> >> infrared light to fight cold sores. The light was found to boost the
> immune-system
> >> cells responsible for killing the herpesvirus that causes cold sores.
> >>
> >> The research into the use of light to treat cognitive decline grew out of
> 25
> >> years' worth of research on light therapy to treat seasonal affective
> disorder
> >> (SAD), a type of depression caused by a lack of exposure to sunlight.
> >> Scientists first theorized that geriatric patients who are living in
> institutions and
> >> confined to their beds probably receive little natural light and are
> likely
> >> to be suffering from light deprivation. A study in which 10 patients were
>
> >> exposed to 10,000 lux of light for 30 minutes for five days showed that
> their
> >> depression levels decreased significantly during this high-intensity light
> therapy
> >> compared with lower levels of light exposure. In fact, after such
> exposures,
> >> half of the participants no longer scored within the depressed range.
> >> Furthermore, they found that the more depressed the patient, according to
> their
> >> Geriatric Depression Scale scores (GDS), the greater their improvement (J
> Gerontol A
> >> Biol Sci Med Sci, 2001; 56: M356-60).
> >>
> >> Given these findings, scientists then wondered whether light could be used
> to
> >> treat any psychiatric disturbances other than depression. Their theory
> rested
> >> on two assumptions: that timed exposures to light causes changes in
> circadian
> >> (sleep-wake) cycles; and that all diseases are subject to chronobiological
>
> >> features-that is, cycles that correspond to sunlight.
> >>
> >> That living things are at the mercy of the sun was first mooted by Dr
> Franz
> >> Halberg, at the University of Minnesota, who discovered that many
> biological
> >> processes appear to run according to an in-built 'clock'. All living
> things
> >> apparently respond to the same 24-hour rhythm, in tandem with the earth's
>
> >> rotation. Halberg coined the terms chronobiology'- referring to the
> influence of time
> >> and certain periodic cycles on biological functions-and 'circadian' from
> >> circa = about and dia = day) rhythms to describe daily biological cycles.
> He
> >> created the Chronobiology Laboratories at the University of Minnesota and
> became
> >> known as the father of chronobiology. And, as his lab began to discover,
> >> chronobiology is a readymade feature of organisms-not something learned or
> acquired,
> >> but an inherent property of life.
> >>
> >> Besides circadian rhythms, Halberg also discovered that living things keep
> in
> >> time with many other periodic rhythms; indeed, halfweekly, weekly, monthly
>
> >> and yearly cycles govern virtually every biological function. The human
> pulse
> >> and blood pressure, body temperature and blood-clotting, circulation of
> ly
> >> mphocytes, hormonal cycles and other automatic functions of the human body
> all
> >> appear to ebb and flow according to some basic, recurring timetable. These
> rhythms
> >> are not unique to humans, but are present throughout nature, and evident
> even
> >> in the fossilized forms of single-celled organisms that lived millions of
>
> >> years ago.
> >>
> >> Patients with dementia are known to have disturbed circadian rhythms. A
> study
> >> of the 24-hour circadian atterns and the sleep-wake cycles of 77
> nursing-home
> >> patients found that the patients slept fitfully, reflected by their
> irregular
> >> sleep- wake cycles. Many people with dementia also spend comparatively
> less
> >> time exposed to bright light than do other people (Sleep; 1997; 20:
> 18-23).
> >>
> >> Patients with dementia also have chaotic sleeping habits, with more
> frequent
> >> bouts of waking during nighttime sleep and more frequent napping during
> the
> >> day (Int J Geriatr Psychiatry, 2006; 21: 945-50). Thus far, light therapy
> has
> >> been used to treat such mental illnesses as adult
> >> attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), bulimia nervosa and
> depression related to Parkinson's
> >> disease, as well as to regulate disturbances in the resting and activity
> cycles of
> >> elderly people with
> >> dementia (CNS Spectr, 2005; 10: 647-63;Sleep Med Rev, 2007; 11: 497-507).
>
> >> Furthermore, a review of all randomized
> >> controlled trials of light treatment for dementia has shown some
> improvement
> >> in rest-activity rhythm. Other studies have shown that it can reduce
> >> behavioural symptoms of dementia such as agitation and sleep disturbances
> (Int J
> >> Geriatr
> >> Psychiatry, 2004; 19: 516-22; Psychiatry Res,1995; 57: 7-12).
> >>
> >> Nevertheless, it's likely that individualized systems work best. One study
> of
> >> bright-light therapy at two psychiatric hospitals and a residential care
> >> facility specially designed for dementia cases found considerable gender
> >> differences in responses. Men and women appeared to react very differently
> to the
> >> high-intensity, lowglare lighting system installed in public areas of the
> studied
> >> units. In particular, women registered far less depression than men in the
>
> >> presence of morning light.
> >>
> >> It could be that light therapy serves as a corrective of the light emitted
> by
> >> the patients. Some 30 years ago, while investigating a cure for cancer,
> >> German physicist Fritz-Albert Popp stumbled upon the fact that all living
> things
> >> emit tiny packets of light, which he called 'biophoton emissions'. He came
> to
> >> believe that living systems maintain a delicate balance
> >> of light, with too much or too little indicating disease. He also
> uncovered
> >> what he called 'delayed luminescence': when light was shone on living
> cells,
> >> the cells would take up the light and, after a time-lag, shine more
> intensely.
> >> Popp considered this to be a corrective effect. Also, in this instance,
> when a
> >> living system was bombarded with too much light, it
> >> rejected the excess.
> >>
> >> Popp has studied these biolight emissions for many years at the
> International
> >> Institute of Biophysics in Neuss, Germany. During this time, he has
> >> discovered that all of the thousands of chemical reactions in the body
> that control
> >> each molecule
> >> at every moment are regulated and coordinated by low-level ultraviolet
> (UV)
> >> light (380 nm). Light, in a sense, is the messenger that is communicating
> the
> >> cells' reactions to each other.
> >>
> >> Popp's more recent investigations concern changes in light production
> >> following medical treatment. In one, medicated ointment was applied to a
> spot on a
> >> patient's arm. In another, in a patient with psoriasis affecting both
> arms, Popp
> >> applied the standard treatment for psoriasis, shining a UV lamp on both
> >> psoriatic and healthy parts of one arm for five minutes.
> >> After a few minutes in both these tests, Popp then measured the biophoton
>
> >> emissions from the treated parts of the arm as well as those from various
>
> >> untreated parts of the body. Using exacting equipment- devices that count
> light
> >> emissions
> >> photon by photon-they discovered something remarkable. If emissions from
> one
> >> part of the body either increased or decreased, so did those from the
> other
> >> parts of the body.
> >>
> >> In his first such experiment, Popp found a large change in the light
> >> emissions not only from where he'd applied the ointment, but also from
> distant parts
> >> of the body. What's more, the size of the changes correlated across the
> entire
> >> body; even from those parts where no ointment had been applied, Popp
> >> recorded the same increase in light as from where the medicine had been
> applied. In
> >> the psoriatic patient after receving the UV therapy, the light emissions
> >> roughly quadrupled from both healthy and psoriatic areas of skin, again
> regardless
> >> of whether or not they'd been exposed to UV rays. An hour later, all parts
> of
> >> the body-treated or untreated, healthy or unhealthy-had reverted to
> identical
> >> light emissions, although the healthy regions of skin showed twice the
> amount
> >> of delayed luminescence as did unhealthy regions. This may be because
> healthy
> >> skin didn't 'need' the light and so 'got rid' of it, whereas the psoriatic
>
> >> regions did need it and so retained it.
> >>
> >> Popp believes that he has uncovered a new channel of communications within
>
> >> the body that uses light as a means of instantaneous, 'non-local',
> signalling to
> >> the rest of the organism. Popp's research takes us one step closer to
> >> understanding how our body communicates with itself as well as with the
> rest of the
> >> universe. Parts of the body tell each other the state of things through
> tiny
> >> notes of light. His findings also suggest why the tools of modern medicine
> so
> >> often have blunderbuss effects. Even if a treatment is well-targeted, such
> a
> >> non-local communications system will cause it to have a global effect on
> the
> >> living organism.
> >>
> >> Although light is being explored for healing wounds and other skin
> >> conditions, and for pain relief, light research is still in its infancy.
> Each wavelength
> >> and frequency appears to create a different reaction, so it's important to
>
> >> tread carefully at this
> >> preliminary stage.
> >>
> >> Indeed, even light can have sideeffects. Patients may experience hypomania
> (a
> >> state between euphoria and a manic 'high') or hyperactivation of the
> >> autonomic nervous system, especially early in the treatment (CNS Spectr,
> 2005; 10:
> >> 647-63). Nevertheless, this is the first evidence that the signalling and
>
> >> exchange of photons constantly carried on between living things is not
> just a means
> >> of communication. As we are truly beings of light, we may also be able to
>
> >> correct our own
> >> light when it goes awry.
> >>
> >> Lynne McTaggart
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> > Kate Marks
> >
> >
>
0
--------------------- --------- --------- -------
This mail sent through http://www.ukonline.net