“Frequency medicine”. Say that to a friend and see if they know what you’re referring to. It’s possible they have heard of it or about it but are probably fuzzy on the details.
Now say “quantum medicine” and watch their face light up. “Oh yeah, sure, I’ve heard of that”, they’ll announce. And they’d be right; quantum medicine, quantum physics, quantum anything – it would seem that what we know about ourselves, our physical world and even the universe, is expanding rapidly.
What this growing awareness of all things quantum means today is that a whole lot of paradigms are being thrown out the window. As science uncovers areas of knowledge only hinted at previously, the old ways of looking at the physical world are changing dramatically. We have moved from a knowledge base built on Newtonian principles to one being built on quantum principles.
One of the principles of quantum physics is that everything is vibration and therefore everything has a frequency.
And that brings us back to frequency medicine. It may surprise many to learn that frequency medicine, while it is quantum in its essence, is not new. Not by a long shot.
As far back as the early 1900s, practitioners in the U.S., England, and Europe were routinely using microcurrents of electricity at varying strengths to treat hundreds of ailments, illnesses, and diseases with remarkable results. Unfortunately, many of the results were not documented or cross-referenced among practitioners and relied solely on anecdotal reporting.
The practice was about to end after a handful of influential figures in American society set out to standardize medical training in American institutions of higher learning, chief among them, Johns Hopkins University. The man who financed much of it was no less than John D. Rockefeller.
The world leader in medical training and education at the time was Germany. So, it was the German model, with its strong emphasis on scientific discovery, methodology, and pragmatism that the American group adopted and brought back to American shores.
However, frequency medicine, based at the time on no such particular standards, was sacrificed at the altar of efficiency and scientific evidence, and its practice branded as quackery.
We can’t blame those men who, in the early part of the 20th century when American industrialism was beginning its enormous growth through efficiency (think of Henry Ford’s assembly line), wanted to bring American medical standards into line with industrial standards; they simply didn’t know what they didn’t know about frequency medicine, or, if you prefer, quantum medicine.
But we do now.
We know, for example, that everything vibrates and that the idea that anything is ‘solid’ is patently false. Quantum physics proved this half a century or more ago.
Another word for vibration is frequency and frequency can be measured.
Frequency medicine began to emerge from its underground exile almost by accident in 1946 when an osteopath named Harry Van Gelder bought a practice from a Canadian doctor in Vancouver, B.C. Van Gelder discovered an old machine covered by a sheet in a back room. He also found a list of electrical frequencies.
Fascinated by his discovery, Van Gelder began to use the old machine and list of frequencies to treat some of his patients – with astonishing results.
Some 50 years later, that same list of frequencies found its way into the hands of Dr. Carolyn McMakin, a skilled chiropractor with a flourishing practice. Like Van Gelder, Dr. McMakin also began to explore the use of microcurrent frequencies. Her diagnostic skills, finely honed intuition and patience, along with a determination to keep trying, has led to her to becoming the leading authority on Frequency Specific Microcurrent (FSM) therapy.
Dr. McMakin’s carefully documented clinical results are genuine scientific evidence that FSM is the real deal. What’s even more incredible is how wide and varied the conditions that she and her trained staff can treat successfully. She documents her work in The Resonance Effect: How Frequency Specific Microcurrent Is Changing Medicine.
Dr. McMakin is also a guest on an upcoming episode of The Art 2 Aging.
In that interview, she details how she treated Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver, Terrell Owens, after he broke his right leg and tore the Achilles tendon in his right ankle.
The normal healing timeline was at least six months. But Owens broke his leg seven weeks before the Super Bowl.
“Doc, I want to play in the Super Bowl. Can you make it happen?” he asked Dr. McMakin.
What was seemingly a ridiculous impossibility, became a reality and you’ll hear the whole story plus a lot more next week!