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Vibrational (Energy) Medicine from Sacred Centres The Healing Power of Colour
Colour is used in many forms to heal and aid the sick, diseased and the distressed. Colour has been used in healing from
ancient times, as far back as Atlantis. The sun's rays have been known to have magical healing qualities and these rays
passed through a spectrum, will give you colours that have very good healing qualities for certain illnesses and injuries. from Harmony is the Healer Please support CHI by purchasing this book through our bookstore links "What heals, it would seem, is the 'right vibration', the 'right frequency', 'right resonance'. Health is a subtle level of harmonious activity within the human organism, and re-activating it by whatever means is thus the key to healing. In this way symptoms, far from being directly combated, are simply made superfluous. " Kahuna Healing is an energy system based on ancient wisdom. It is direct, powerful, and simple. Healing energies are channeled directly to the person.- Initiation allows for greater awareness and sensitivity for the practitioner, through the Third Eye. This healing energy is very loving and direct. The practitioner centers and balances the person, then allows their hands to be drawn to areas in need of healing. This is often felt as tingling or spiraling heat. Healing, distant or present, is done through the Heart Chakra, or in the Rainbow Healing Circle. The Healing Circle weaves energies of the Higher Self, bridging time and space. The results are very powerful. Recipients feel changes quickly in areas of need, be they physical, mental, emotional, or spiritual. Kahuna can be used for Health Screenings, in Healing Circles, for Previous Life Healings, and Distance Healing Leaflady is a certified Kahuna Healer, and Usui Reiki Master Researchers translate DNA code into music Tuesday, January 21, 2003 Posted: 10:21 AM EST (1521 GMT) - Composer Richard Krull, left, joined researchers Aurora Sanchez Sousa and Fernando Baquero in an interpretation of DNA code into easy listening music. MADRID, Spain (AP) -- Imagine the human genome as music. Unravel DNA's double helix, picture its components lined up like piano keys and assign a note to each. Run your finger along the keys. Spanish scientists did that just for fun and recorded what they call an audio version of the blueprint for life. The team at Madrid's Ramon y Cajal Hospital was intrigued by music's lure -- how it can make toddlers dance and adults cry -- and looked for hints in the genetic material that makes us what we are. They also had some microbial genes wax melodic. The end product is "Genoma Music," a 10-tune CD due out in February. "It's a way to bring science and music closer together," said Dr. Aurora Sanchez Sousa, a piano-playing microbiologist who specializes in fungi. DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, is composed of long strings of molecules called nucleotides, which are distinguished by which of four nitrogen-containing bases they contain: adenine, guanine, thymine or cytosine, represented as A, G, T and C. These became the musical notes. French-born composer Richard Krull turned DNA sequences -- a snippet of a gene might look like AGCGTATACGAGT -- into sheet music. He arbitrarily assigned tones of the eight-note, do-re-mi scale to each letter. Thymine became re, for instance. Guanine is so, adenine la and cytosine do. It's all in the genes Played solo on percussion, classical guitar or the other instruments used on the CD, the sequences would sound cute but rudimentary, the musical equivalent of PacMan in an era of Microsoft Xbox. So the alphabet soup of bases served as just that, base lines to accompany melodies composed by Krull and his scientific colleague. They say the melodies were influenced, even dictated, by the mood and rhythm of the underlying genetic code. It's all in the genes. In general, the genome music is an easy-listening sound that is vaguely New Age. One of the prettiest songs is based on Connexin 26, a human gene that causes deafness when it mutates. Another song draws on a yeast gene known as SLT2. Sanchez Sousa, the main author of the project, is fond of the sequence because it features a stretch in which one triplet of nitrogen bases appears several times in rapid succession -- a repetitive phenomenon that has a musical equivalent called ostinato. She declined to discuss marketing plans for the CD. She said she's circulated it only among academics so far, and psychologists in particular find it relaxing. Her team's plans for future music include having the hospital choir sing a vocal piece based on DNA from a bacteria. Seeking music in nature goes way back. In the 6th century B.C., the Greek philosopher and mathematician Pythagoras argued that celestial bodies in rotation gave off pitched sounds that blended into a beautiful harmony he called "the music of the spheres." The idea is that matter and its behavior -- wheat fields shimmering and tongues of fire dancing -- may hold something intrinsic that can be transformed into music, said Dr. Fernando Baquero, head of microbiology at Ramon y Cajal Hospital. Maybe that's why people like music: It's already inside them anyway, so hearing it touches a piece of them, Baquero said. "When we like something, it is because we recognize it," he said. "It's funny, but to like is to recognize." Aroma-Therapy Flower Essences Distance Healing & Intuitive Readings Four Healing Energies Gems - Gem Healing - Gems II Reiki The Resonator Chip The Sixth Sense Spectro-Chrome System Vibrational Healing Support - these remedies and health devices are some things I use and find very beneficial in my work as a wholistic practitioner. You may find them of help to you too.
DNR
testimonial - Light Influences Human Health - WASHINGTON (ANI) -- Light can both heal and harm. This was the conclusion of a study by neuroscientist George Brainard. Brainard and colleagues at the Farber Institute for Neurosciences at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia have spent much of the past two decades trying to understand how the brain interprets, reacts to and uses light independently of the visual system. They have clarified how the human eye uses light to regulate melatonin production, and in turn, the body's biological clock. They have discovered what appears to be a novel "photoreceptor system" in the human eye that regulates the biological and behavioural effects of light on the body. The team has elucidated the specific wavelengths of light that control the production of melatonin, which plays an important role in the body's circadian rhythms. The wavelengths of light in the blue region of the visible spectrum are the most potent in controlling melatonin production. "This discovery will have an immediate impact on the therapeutic use of light for treating winter depression and circadian disorders", said Dr Brainard, professor of neurology at Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University. "In the long range, we think this will shape all artificial lighting, whether it's used for therapeutic purposes, or for normal illumination of workplaces, hospitals or homes. Broad changes in general architectural lighting may take years, but the groundwork has been established", he added. Dr Brainard argues that the therapeutic use of light is becoming more important to society increasingly deprived of sleep. Light therapy is an already well established treatment for the winter blues, or seasonal affective disorder, a not-so-uncommon problem during long cold, wintry nights. At the same time, Dr Brainard and others are studying an even newer hypothesis: Over-exposure to light at night can disrupt the production of melatonin and disturb circadian rhythms in a way that raises the risk of breast cancer in women. Epidemiological studies have found an increased breast cancer incidence in women who work night shifts, while researchers have shown a lower risk of breast cancer in blind women. While much work remains, he said, if the hypothesis proves to be true, there will need to be fundamental changes in the way societies illuminate their homes, factories and streets. 2-17-3 (ANI) Copyright © 2001 ANI-Asian News International. All rights reserved. Ricotta cheese and cherries blended together causes your body to make its own melatonin. Take 2 tablespoons about an hour before bedtime. (ge)
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