Guest guest Posted February 24, 2006 Report Share Posted February 24, 2006 Hello, one should take into consideration, that electrosmog may have an impact on rosacea. For instance from mobile phone masts in the vicinity. Greetings, Claessens member Verband Baubiologie www.milieuziektes.nl www.milieuziektes.be www.hetbitje.nl checked by Norton Antivirus rosacea > Hello, > > Has anyone had any experience using Rife technology for rosacea? > > I was just diagnosed with rosacea. > > It's an inflammation of the skin, mostly on the face. > > Flushing can trigger it. I have had Lyme and babesia for some time and > have > been post-menopausal for three years. So the babesia sweats, the Lyme > flushing and possible hot flashes may have triggered this over time. Some > of the rosacea symptoms are not new, but they have been barely perceptible > until now. I think this was triggered by very cold weather. > > Anyway, the reason I'm writing here is to learn whether anyone's used rife > technology to deal with rosacea, or knows of someone who has. > > I have my own EMEM3D. > > Thanks so much. > > Be well, > Deanna > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2006 Report Share Posted February 24, 2006 I resolved rosacea using irradiated vasoline. Using a germicidal low pressure mercury vapor lamp, I melted vasoline in a double broiler to thin it out and then exposed the jelly for 30 minutes at a distance of about 8 inches. I then returned the material to its original jar. After a few weeks of putting the jelly over the infected area, the stored energy of the light waves was impinged onto the bacteria, killing it. In the 1930s this technique was discovered by a Dr. Eugene H. Eising, M.D., a New York Surgeon, and was produced commercially under the name " Radiolathum " . An article appeared in the December 1932 issue of 'Popular Science.' pgs. 38 & 39. The lamp used was equivalent to the germicidal lamps that operate in the UV-C portion of the ultraviolet energy band. UV-C does not transmit readily in nature as the waves are stopped by the molecules in the air. The peak of low pressure mercury vapor is at 253.7 NM with a spike at 185 or so. It is the 185 NM that fractures oxygen creating ozone. Apparently the ozone gets trapped in the jelly and is slow-released over time. I suspect that ozonated olive oil would work just as well although I have not tried it. There are commercial sources of ozonated olive oil. Dr. Eising pointed out that exposures longer than 30 minutes tended to reduce the potency of the material. It is for that reason that I suspect that ozone is not the effective component operating here. I mention this because the actual mechanism of this reaction remains unknown and I do not wish to make statements indicating fact when it is only conjecture on my part. Dr. H. Krusen, M.D., mentions in his 1937 book 'Light Therapy' that many other materials can store up this energy. He mentioned orange juice, oilve oil, shreaded wheat, and a few other substances. It is well-known that non-distilled water will also retain these strange energies. Many believe that the mysterious energy from the either (the medium of outer-space i.e.., its vacuum) is the prana or life force that rides upon light waves which it uses as a carrier. It is possible that the energy is neutrinos This energy was first described by Baron Karl Von Reichenbach as the 'od.' Later experiments by Edwin D. Babbet, M.D., in his stellar work of 1878 Principals of Light and Color,' provided a massive amount of scientific data supporting the theory. All of this research led Col. Dinshah Ghadiali to develop the SpectroChrome light therapy system in the 1930s. Contrary to popular belief that SpectroChrome was a quack device, I know from my own personal experience that the technology works. Those who criticize what they do not understand make up the vast majority of our present medical system. People with narrow minds who cannot comprehend anything beyond what they consider to be the pinnacle of man's understanding of medical technology. The future of medicine will be vibratory energy, not drugs. These people remain clue-less. -- rosacea Hello, Has anyone had any experience using Rife technology for rosacea? I was just diagnosed with rosacea. It's an inflammation of the skin, mostly on the face. Flushing can trigger it. I have had Lyme and babesia for some time and have been post-menopausal for three years. So the babesia sweats, the Lyme flushing and possible hot flashes may have triggered this over time. Some of the rosacea symptoms are not new, but they have been barely perceptible until now. I think this was triggered by very cold weather. Anyway, the reason I'm writing here is to learn whether anyone's used rife technology to deal with rosacea, or knows of someone who has. I have my own EMEM3D. Thanks so much. Be well, Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2006 Report Share Posted February 24, 2006 That's interesting about the UV and vasolene. Has any rosacea sufferer used the " orgone blanket " to heal this skin malady? The Professor in Dayton. -------------- Original message ---------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2006 Report Share Posted February 24, 2006 I keep making postings about the medical profession, don't mis understand these statements. The criticism is directed towards change, for as the world shifts faster than the medical profession can recognize, it is being left behind. Perhaps that is just the way things are supposed to be, but it doesn't need to be that way. The medical profession is, and has been, anywhere from 40 to 70 years behind in the utilization of new healing technologies.It typically takes between two and three generations for new ideas to be integrated into the medical model of health care. Use of specific wavelengths of light to heal has been around and utilized for well over 70 years. It is only in the last 10 to 15 years that the medical profession has started to investigate and utilize this. They wear as a badge of the profession , a crude device that hasn't fundamentally changed in the past 150 years. It's called a stethiscope. It's use depends upon the physicians acoustic acuity, which drops off after 50 for nearly everyone. Modern miniature electronics - with selective notch filters, and selective frequency band amplification have been around for decades. They are known as hearing aids. Draping a set of miniature headphones ( the amp could be down at the stethiscope head ) across ones shoulders apparently just isn't acceptable right now, regardless of the increased diagnostic capability that would be possible. Bio energetics are the future of the medical model of health care treatment. Pharmacologics will still play an important role, but that role will be secondary. Jim Bare >All of this research led Col. Dinshah Ghadiali >to develop the SpectroChrome light therapy system in the 1930s. Contrary to >popular belief that SpectroChrome was a quack device, I know from my own >personal experience that the technology works. Those who criticize what they >do not understand make up the vast majority of our present medical system. >People with narrow minds who cannot comprehend anything beyond what they >consider to be the pinnacle of man's understanding of medical technology. >The future of medicine will be vibratory energy, not drugs. These people >remain clue-less. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2006 Report Share Posted February 24, 2006 Orgone blankets do not heal. They may help with pain. Greetings, Claessens member Verband Baubiologie www.milieuziektes.nl www.milieuziektes.be www.hetbitje.nl checked by Norton Antivirus Re: rosacea > That's interesting about the UV and vasolene. Has any rosacea > sufferer used the " orgone blanket " to heal this skin malady? > The Professor in Dayton. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 25, 2006 Report Share Posted February 25, 2006 Some nut-cases think that orgone blankets do not heal. My circle of friends has applied them to very serious burns and the hospital personnel cannot explain why the burned area gets healed so very fast. TPID ps Orgone blankets cannot reduce pain except insofar as healing takes place very rapidly so pain is diminished. -------------- Original message ---------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 25, 2006 Report Share Posted February 25, 2006 before my daughter was diagnosed with lyme, she was diagnosed with many things including melenoma, MS, and cea. Now we realize it is the EM rash of lyme. Germs have actually been cultured from rashes, i found in reading some lyme books. Use the lyme, babesia, erechlosis, mycoplasma frequencies, and if you get a herx, it may be lyme. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 26, 2006 Report Share Posted February 26, 2006 Hi, Could it heal my super dry face that burns constantly and requires moisturizer several times a day? haltreacy@... wrote: Some nut-cases think that orgone blankets do not heal. My circle of friends has applied them to very serious burns and the hospital personnel cannot explain why the burned area gets healed so very fast. TPID ps Orgone blankets cannot reduce pain except insofar as healing takes place very rapidly so pain is diminished. -------------- Original message ---------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 27, 2006 Report Share Posted February 27, 2006 Now this is just a suggestion: Reichian therapists might diagnose a " burning face " as an energy overcharge which can be reduced by the use of the Medical DOR-Buster. The Orgone Blanket might add further to the face problem since it accumulates MORE energy into the body and in your case there may already be too much! Find a Reichan practitioner to obtain a medical opinion after a " face to face " meeting. The Professor in Dayton. -------------- Original message ---------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 28, 2006 Report Share Posted February 28, 2006 missourinaturegirl wrote: > Use the lyme, babesia, erechlosis, mycoplasma frequencies, and if you > get a herx, it may be lyme. I do have Lyme and get the Lyme flushing. But the part that is diagnosed as rosacea looks nothing like any Lyme rash picture I've ever seen and looks exactly as online pics and descriptions talk about rosacea. Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 28, 2006 Report Share Posted February 28, 2006 ---Use the lyme, babesia, erechlosis, mycoplasma frequencies, and if you get a herx, it may be lyme. I do have Lyme and get the Lyme flushing. But the part that is diagnosed as rosacea looks nothing like any Lyme rash picture I've ever seen and looks exactly as online pics and descriptions talk about rosacea. Deanna My daughter has cea, and that describes a syndrome, not a diagnosis. She has 32 years of lymes and 32 years of cea syndrome. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 1, 2006 Report Share Posted March 1, 2006 missourinaturegirl wrote: > My daughter has cea, and that describes a syndrome, not a > diagnosis. She has 32 years of lymes and 32 years of cea > syndrome. I understand what you're saying. But then again, I don't understand completely what you're saying. lol Would you expand on this a little more so I can understand the concept? Let me ask it this way: if people have rosacea but not Lyme do they have a syndrome, or do the have a dx of rosacea? I have a very brief check in with my LLMD tomorrow, so I hope I have a chance to ask about this, in addition to my complex Lyme/babesia symptoms and protocol. Thanks so much. I really appreciate your giving me this info. Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 2, 2006 Report Share Posted March 2, 2006 I am sure there are many conditions that will result in a skin condition called rosacea, but lyme is only one of them. When you look at a list of lyme symptoms, this is on some lists. I have a friend who is beet red all the time in the face and neck, and she has the new syndrome called Sjogren's, but when i looked that up, it was a syndrome associated with lyme. The skin just tells the story of what is going on in the body,especially the condition of the liver, and even skin doctors mis diagnose diseases, because they do not have some of the biowarfare diseases in the textbooks. It certainly was not mentioned in nursing school. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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