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SIX PILLARS OF ENERGY MEDICINE
Clinical Strengths of a Complementary Paradigm
David Feinstein, Ph.D.
Donna Eden |
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ABSTRACT |
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The current status of energy medicine and
its increasing challenge to the biochemical paradigm that has dominated conventional
medicine are reviewed. While energy medicine represents only a small fraction of one
percent of the 2.2 trillion dollar health care industry, six properties of energy medicine
give it strengths that could augment conventional health care models. These include the
ways energy medicine 1) can address biological processes at their energetic foundations (reach),
2) regulates biological processes with precision, speed, and flexibility (efficiency),
3) fosters healing and prevents illness with interventions that can be readily,
economically, and non-invasively applied (practicality), 4) includes methods that
can be utilized on an at-home, self-help basis, fostering a stronger patient and
practitioner partnership in the healing process (patient empowerment), 5) adopts
non-linear concepts consistent with distant healing, the healing impact of prayer, and the
role of intention in healing (quantum compatibility), and 6) strengthens the
integration of body, mind, and spirit, leading not only to a focus on healing, but to
achieving greater well-being, peace, and passion for life (holistic orientation).
Keywords: biochemical paradigm, biofield, energy medicine, fields, gene expression,
holistic
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SIX PILLARS OF
ENERGY MEDICINE |
| Clinical Strengths of a
Complementary Paradigm |
David Feinstein, Ph.D.
Donna Eden |
|
|
We are now in the process of revising the past
centurys biochemical concept, under which all major life processes are chemical in
nature, to one that proposes that such processes are electromagnetic in nature. |
Robert O. Becker, M.D.1 |
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|
While energy medicine2,3
is still a microdot on the health care landscape in terms of utilization, public
recognition, and the economic resources allocated to its development, Norman Shealy, M.D.,
the founding president of the American Holistic Medical Association, has predicted based
on striking clinical and emerging scientific findings that "energy medicine is
the future of medicine."4 Energy medicine is based on the supposition that
illness results from disturbances in the bodys energies and energy fields5
and can be addressed via interventions into those energies and energy fields. It is one of
five domains of "complementary and alternative medicine" identified by the
National Institutes of Health (NIH), with others including biologically based practices
(such as the ingestion of herbs, vitamins, minerals, and amino acids), manipulative and
body-based practices (such as chiropractic, osteopathy, massage, rolfing, and
reflexology), and mind-body medicine (such as hypnosis, visual imagery, meditation,
and biofeedback).6 NIH also recognizes "whole medical systems," which
may incorporate elements of the above, such as traditional Chinese medicine, Ayurvedic
medicine, naturopathy, homeopathy, and various indigenous healing traditions.
Strategies for restoring and maintaining the health of the bodys
energies by stimulating specific "energy points" have been passed along the
generations in China and other parts of the world for at least 5000 years. A body that had
been mummified in a snow-bound mountainous region along the border between Austria and
Italy around 3000 B.C. had tattoos on exactly the points that are indicated in traditional
Chinese medicine for treating the kind of lumbar spine arthritis revealed by an x-ray
analysis of the body (9 of the 15 markings were along a meridian or energy pathway that is
used in treating back pain, including one on the precise point that is considered the
"master point" for back pain). Forensic analysis also revealed that the body's
intestines had been rife with whipworm eggs, and indeed, some of the other markings were
on points that are traditionally used for treating stomach upset.7 Similar
tattoos have been found on mummified bodies in other regions, ranging from South America
to Siberia.
As contemporary clinical experience and
scientific investigation lend increasing credibility to the concepts and procedures used
in energy medicine, while at the same time public discontent with and concern about the
dangers and costs of conventional medicine grow at a discomfiting rate,8 six
areas are emerging where energy medicine might augment and in some ways supersede
conventional medical practices. After examining the fundamental natural mechanism
underlying energy medicinethe decisive impact of the bodys energies and
"organizing fields" on gene expression and cell activitythese six areas
are outlined and discussed. |
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More than the genetic
coding inherited from ones parents, it is the moment-by-moment expression of
the genes that most impacts health.9,10 The basic role of a
geneinstructing its cell to produce a particular protein or other moleculeis
well understood.11 Each cell, in fact, undergoes some 100,000 chemical
reactions per second, many of them governed by the expression of the genes in its nucleus.
What is not understood, however, is how these chemical reactions are coordinated with the
actions of the bodys other trillions of cells. As Lynn McTaggart asks, "If all
these genes are working together like some unimaginably big orchestra, who or what is the
conductor?"12(p49) The answer that is emerging from observations
documented by scientists from a range of disciplines,13 though still not widely
accepted, is that organizing fields direct biochemical processes as decisively as a
magnetic field aligns metal filings. Organs operate in a harmony that cannot be accounted
for by the actions of chemical messengers. The brain, heart, and lungs are in such
electromagnetic accord, for instance, that when there is an electromagnetic change in one,
the others change simultaneously in phase.14 Coordinating 100,000
chemical reactions per second in each of up to 100 trillion cells is also a task of a
different order than can be explained by mechanisms such as cells sending chemical
messengers to other cells.
While the way the bodys unimaginably complex processes are
coordinated is one of the most fundamental questions in biology, the biochemical paradigm
simply does not yield plausible answers. Instead, the properties that are attributed to
genes "go far beyond their known chemical roles."15(p158) For
instance, while the chromosomes and genes in the nucleus of every cell are identical, the
appropriate instructions for a kidney are somehow elicited when the gene is in a kidney
cell and for a liver when it is in a liver cell. In fact, when primitive, undifferentiated
tissue cells from a salamander were grafted near the tail, they grew into another tail;
when grafted near the hind leg, they grew into another leg.16 What chemical
process told these genes what was required? Genes give their instructions as if they are
amply informed about what is occurring all over the body and about what is needed from
them in relationship to the entire system. Who, indeed, is the conductor?
While Western medicine has identified molecules that initiate gene
expression (inducers) and DNA sequences that activate the synthesis of RNA (promoters), it
does not offer plausible explanations for the agencies that coordinate such processes
across the body. No one has identified chemical mechanisms that inform the gene about the
state of the whole organism. Seeking other explanations, scientists from a spectrum of
disciplinesincluding biologists,15 physicists,17 neurologists,18
and anesthesiologists19have postulated the idea of a "field"
where biological information is essentially "broadcast" to genes, neurons, and
other governing mechanisms.
The concept that energy fields impact physical development keeps
reemerging within biology.15,20,21,22 In the 1930s Harold Burr, a
neuroanatomist at the Yale School of Medicine, measured the electrical field around an
unfertilized salamander egg and found that it was shaped like a mature salamander,23
as if the blueprint for the adult were already there in the eggs energy field. The
electrical axis that would later align with the brain and spinal cord was already there in
the unfertilized egg, as measured by a vacuum-tube voltmeter with extremely sensitive,
non-distorting, silver/silver-chloride electrodes to detect microvolt differentialsa
device that contemporary engineers view as having been strikingly sophisticated.24
Burr went on to find electrical fields surrounding numerous organisms, from moulds to
plants to frogs to humans, and he was able to describe electrical patterns that
distinguished health from illness. He demonstrated not only correspondences between
specific pathologies and electrical characteristics of related organs, but that physical
illness is preceded by changes in an organisms electromagnetic field!25
The implications of this finding for health care are just beginning to be appreciated, and
they challenge the field of energy medicine to innovate new approaches for preventing
illness.
Burrs original papers have recently been scrutinized from the
perspective of modern advances in electrical engineering. The instruments he devised were
found to be "remarkable for their time," providing readings that would be
consistent with todays state-of-the-art devices, and on par with the
"pioneering genius [reflected in] Burrs revolutionary contributions to the
scientific understanding of the organizing principles animating all life."24
Burrs findings did, of course, build on the work of other scientists. Owen Frazee
reported in 1909 that passing electrical currents through water containing young
salamanders speeded up the regeneration of amputated limbs.26 Elmer Lund at the
University of Texas found, in the 1920s, that the cellular structure of the hydra, a tiny
fresh-water aquatic animal, could be reorganized by applying electric current strong
enough to override the organisms electromagnetic polarities, causing for instance a
head to appear where a tail would be expected.27
Additional evidence of field effects on physiological processes has
since been accumulating. One of the most readily demonstrated effects of fields on
biological expression, seed germination, has been repeatedly reported using a range of
interventions, such as exposing the seed to music or to a healers hands.28
Pulsed magnetic stimulation (PMS) machines, or "brain pacemakers," create
magnetic fields which have been effective in working with a range of disorders, from
Parkinsons disease to epilepsy to depression. The theory behind this use of energy
fields to influence biological processes is not at all esoteric:
A normal cell has an electrical potential
of about 90 millivolts. An inflamed cell has a potential of about 120 millivolts, and a
cell in a state of degeneration may drop to 30 millivolts. By entraining the electrical
fields of the cells within its range to the magnetic pulses emitted by the PMS machine,
cells can be brought back into a healthy range.29(p67-68)
Reviewing studies exploring the relation
between electromagnetism and biology, Abraham Liboff summarizes: "We find that this
work strongly suggests an overarching explanation that is purely field-driven."14(p45)
He points to the effects of both internally-generated and externally-applied fields.
Internally-generated fields can be seen, for instance, after an animal has been injured.
Electrical currents connecting enormous numbers of cells are produced as part of the
growth and repair mechanism, a process that clearly transcends the actions of the
individual cells. These observations suggest to Liboff that an electrical field is both
"intrinsically interwoven into the fabric of the system"14 (p45) and
at the same time, this field is able to generate various currents that act upon the
system to stimulate growth and repair. Liboff also cites laboratory studies showing that
the field does not have to be generated from within the organism to stimulate growth or
repair. When external currents are applied to an area of tissue, for instance, large
numbers of cells also act in concert to initiate specific physiological processes (for
better or for worse), and the well-established potential for healing from such procedures
may begin to explain the therapeutic effects reported after a practitioners hand
(which itself generates a measurable electromagnetic field) has been held in the proximity
of diseased or injured tissue.30 The electromagnetic fields of healers
hands have not only been measured, they increase significantly, compared to baseline
measures, when a practitioner is focused on the healing process.31 |
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Several energy fields
apparently work in concert in governing fundamental biological processes, including a biofield
surrounding the body, local fields concentrated in specific areas of the body, and pathways
that regulate the flow of energy within the body. These fields, interestingly, correspond
with energy systems that have been described in the healing traditions of other cultures.
Specifically, ancient constructs adopted into our language as the aura (biofields),
the chakras (local fields), and the meridians (energy pathways) are finding
empirical support in modern laboratories.
The Biofield. An energy field surrounding the
body, as first measured scientifically in Burrs laboratory, has been demonstrated in
a number of subsequent research programs.32,33 Most commonly referred to
as the "biofield,"34 its electromagnetic properties have been
registered using sensitive magnetometers, such as the SQUID.35 The biofield
corresponds with older notions of a distinctive but intangible "aura"
surrounding the body, seen not only in religious paintings but also described in numerous
healing traditions.36 Scientists investigating the biofield have suggested that
it holds information about an organism and transmits this information throughout the
organism in a manner that is analogous to the way a holographic plate distributes
information throughout a hologram.34 The biofield is comprised of an extremely
weak but measurable electromagnetic fieldwith its own waveform, intensity, polarity,
and modulation patternsthat surrounds and permeates all living systems. Consensus
has not been reached, however, on whether this fully accounts for the biofields
actions or if its electromagnetic properties are just the measurable component of a more
complex field that includes a "fifth force"17 that is distinct from
the four forces known to physicsgravity, electromagnetism, and the strong and weak
quantum forces (further discussed under the "Fifth Pillar").
Some investigators conceive of the
biofield as an aggregation of the combined electromagnetic fields of the bodys ions,
molecules, cells, tissue, and organs, forming a "very complex standing wave," a
convergence of many electromagnetic frequencies.34 This wave is believed to
play a decisive role in the integration of all the bodys energy systems. Because the
biofield is electromagnetically extremely weak (so much so that scientists in the past
have dismissed its emissions as waste energy or "noise"), investigators have
speculated that it regulates the bodys biochemistry and physiology more by conveying
information than by exerting force.34 While the electrical charge of the
biofield may be too weak to directly impact cellular structures, Becker found, in a
surprising discovery, that tiny currents, on the order of a billionth of an ampere, were
more effective than larger currents in stimulating tissue generation.37 Rubik
distinguishes between "structural" and "regulatory" mediation of
biological events, and she speculates that energy interventions which create even small
fluctuations in the biofield may work by sending signals to the bodys regulatory
mechanisms rather than by directly acting upon the bodys physical structures.34
She believes the speed and efficiency by which the biofield, with its electromagnetic and
holographic properties, can distribute information may account for the rapid, holistic
effects reported by energy medicine practitioners.
Local Fields. In
addition to a biofield that surrounds the entire body are concentrated local energy fields
within particular areas of the body. Pioneering research in the 1970s by Valerie Hunt at
UCLAs Energy Fields Laboratory demonstrated that specific regions of the skin
produced very rapid electrical oscillations (up to 1600 cycles per second, as contrasted
with 0 to 100 cycles per second in the brain, 225 in the muscles, and 250 in the heart),38
and that these local energy domains corresponded with ancient descriptions of the
bodys "chakras." The chakras are vortexes of biophysical energy that are a
focus in the practice of yoga and addressed in a variety of healing systems. Spectrogram
analysis39 and Polycontrast Interference Photography40 also reveal
distinct frequency ranges or colors associated with specific chakras. In a different line
of investigation, when advanced meditators consciously projected energy through a chakra,
the strength of the electrical field emanating from that chakra multiplied.41
These energy fields apparently both spiral above and permeate specific areas of the body
and also interact with the biofield, formulations which are consistent with way energy
medicine practitioners have described the relationship among the chakras and the aura.2
Physiological, psychological, and
spiritual functions have been attributed to the chakras.2 At the physiological
level, the chakras envelop with their energies the organs in their proximity,
influencing the health of those organs.42 There is, indeed, some strong
anecdotal evidence that the equilibrium in a chakras energies not only correlates
with and influences the health of the organs located in the chakras field, but that
imbalances in the chakras energies precede (and thus predict) the onset of disease.40
At the psychological level, the chakras are believed to encode experience, with
each chakra associated with a distinct developmental theme (e.g., survival, creativity,
identity, love, expression, deep perception, and transcendence of the ego), comprising a
sort of memory system that parallels neural memory, a redundancy that is perhaps akin to
the redundancy found in the functioning of the right and left cerebral hemispheres. While
such an energy-memory system is foreign to Western thinking, it is taken for granted in
many healing traditions and would go far toward explaining why some organ transplant
donors start to exhibit the psychological characteristics of their donors.43
Spiritual functions attributed to the chakras are based in the way they are believed
to be attuned to metaphysical constructs such as "ancestral memories,"
"past lives," and "archetypes."
Energy Pathways.
A third overarching energy system that seems to regulate the flow of specific energies
within the body corresponds with the "energy pathways" referred to as meridians
in traditional Chinese medicine and also described in a variety of other healing
traditions.44(p34) A study published in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Science in 1998 using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
demonstrated that stimulating an acupuncture point in the toe (each acupuncture point is
believed to sit on the line of and regulate the energy in a particular meridian) activated
the exact areas of the brain that would be predicted by acupuncture theory, despite no
known anatomical pathways connecting the toe to that brain region.45 A special
camera that registers biophotons in the spectral range of 200 to 800 nanometers shows that
when stimulated, the meridians generate light along channels that are identical to the
descriptions of meridians found in the texts of traditional Chinese medicine.46
The meridians and corresponding acupuncture points also exhibit other physical
characteristics such as less electromagnetic resistance,47 enhanced ultrasound
attenuation,48 and the conduction of light,49 infrared,50
and microwaves.44 However because substantial investigation had failed to find
exact physical correlates until Langevin and Yandows recent work on the relationship
of the meridians to connective tissue planes,51 the meridian concept has been
largely discounted by Western science. The meridian system (fourteen major meridians are
generally described, but they are understood as segments of a single continuous energy
system) does not, for instance, correspond with known structures in the circulatory,
lymphatic, or nervous systems, nor are the meridians and acupuncture points even stable in
their shape, size, or location on the skin.52
This, however, is exactly what would be
expected if the meridian system operates as a field that is somewhat independent of the
physical body it acts upon. In fact, the electrical properties of the acupuncture points
can still be identified after death or on an amputated limbwhere blood circulation,
lymph flow, and nerve impulses have ceasedsuggesting "a completely distinct
energy circulatory system interacting with the biomolecular structures but surviving their
dissolution for some time."52(p33) As Curtis and Hurtak propose, the
meridian system may be a distinct energy system that "functions alongside the
accepted blood circulatory, lymphatic, and nervous systems," capable of reading,
coding, and transmitting information from one part of the body to another and providing
"an underlying template for the physical body."52(p34) They believe
it operates on a distinct energetic spectrum whose movement is more like an energy wave
than a tube or vessel. Supporting the hypothesis that this energy system impacts
biological processes, abundant anecdotal and limited empirical evidence suggests that
disruption in a meridian pathway precedes (and, again, thus predicts) disease in specific
organs served by that meridian, and that meridians whose energies are disrupted can be
treated for therapeutic benefit.53 |
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The Electrical, Electromagnetic,
and Subtle Levels of the Bodys Energies |
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Healing traditions
across cultures and throughout history describe and work with specific energy systems that
correspond with the laboratory verifications discussed above of energies that surround the
body, centers where energies converge, and pathways along which energy moves.36
Many healing practitioners report sensing such energies, which they believe play a vital
role in a persons health (these healers may possess a quality analogous to
synthesthesia, where energies most people do not perceive are registered via their senses,
most frequently visually or kinesthetically, but occasionally experienced as smells,
sounds, or tastes54). Such reports are often corroborated by other healers who
are independently recognized for the effectiveness of their methods.55 These
reports, however, also present a challenge to Western models of healing because some of
the energies they describe cannot be detected by existing instrumentation. It is also a
source of debate whether this is because such energies, assuming they exist, fall along
the electromagnetic spectrum but operate in such minute quantities that they do not reach
the necessary thresholds for mechanical detection (electrical current can be detected down
to thirty quadrillionths, or 1 x 10-15, of an ampere56household
current, for comparison, typically carries 15 to 50 amperes) or whether they are of a
fundamentally different nature than electromagnetic energy.57(pi)
While energy takes many formssuch
as kinetic, thermal, chemical, nuclearthe energies most pertinent to energy medicine
seem to involve the bodys 1) electrical energies, 2) electromagnetic energies, and
3) "subtle" energies.
Electricity involves the movement of electrons and protons. Like a
miniature battery, every cell in the body stores and emits electricity. Normally the
outside of a living cell has a positive electrical charge and the inside has a negative
charge. But these charges may momentarily be reversed based on the action of "ion
pumps" on the cell membrane that drive sodium ions and pump potassium ions into the
cell (an ion is an atom or group of atoms that carries an electrical charge). This is the
way that neurological impulses, for example, move along nerve cells. By the time an embryo
is only four cells in size, an electrical gradient can be detected which starts switching
on specific genes.58 Every breath, muscle movement, and every morsel of food
being digested involves electrical activity. Likewise, memories, feelings, and thoughts
are encoded in patterns of tiny electrical impulses.
Electromagnetic radiation is a self-propagating wave. Electromagnetic
waves falls along a spectrum that extends from radio waves to microwaves to infrared light
to visible light to ultraviolet light to x-rays and gamma rays. This spectrum extends in
frequency from 30 Hz (30 cycles per second) all the way up to gamma waves, at a frequency
of 300 EHz (300,000,000,000,000,000,000 cycles per second). The electromagnetic spectrum
can be expressed in terms of energy, wavelength, or frequency. Each is related to the
others in a precise mathematical way. For instance, the energy of the wave (measured in
electron-volts) is directly proportional to the frequency of the wave. While
electromagnetic energy travels as a wave (e.g., light travels from the Sun to the
Earth as a wave), it is absorbed by matter as a particle, called a photon. The
precise nature of electromagnetic waves, however, is still a mystery. Photons are
distributed through the traveling wave, but you cant take an electromagnetic wave
apart and find the photon any more than you can take an absorbed photon apart and find the
electromagnetic wave that delivered it. It was this mystery, in fact (that electromagnetic
energy travels as a wave but is absorbed as a particle), that gave birth to quantum
physics.
Subtle energies were described by
Einstein as energies known because of their effects, even though we do not have the
instruments to detect them directly. Electromagnetism was in that category only 250 years
ago. Its effects could be observed, but electromagnetism could not, itself, be measured.
Many of the energies focused upon by energy medicine practitioners cannot move a needle on
a gauge, yet they appear to impact health and vitality. Meanwhile, a device has been
developed by William Tiller and his colleagues at Stanford that, according to Tiller,
demonstrates the existence of an energy field that is not within the electromagnetic
spectrum.59 Most interesting, Tillers device has also shown that this
subtle energy field responds to human intention.
The hypothesis that the bodys major
energy systemssuch as its biofield, local fields, and energy pathwaysoperate
as electrical, electromagnetic, and subtle energies in varying
combinationscorresponds with a wide range of scientific data and field reports. For
instance, the vortexes of biophysical energy known as the chakras in yoga tradition can be
measured according to electromagnetic frequencies in the area of the body where the chakra
is located.38 But they also seem to contain information that a sensitive healer
can "read" intuitively by becoming attuned to the subtle energies held by that
chakra. Many accounts exist of healers providing accurate medical diagnoses by tuning into
a persons chakra energies, sometimes even reporting in detail a traumatic memory
that was closely followed by the onset of an illness and which the client is able to
readily verify.2
Although the idea that fields carry
biological and other types of information has still, for the most part, attracted little
interest within the scientific community, powerful examples have been coming into the
public eye. Among the most dramatic are with heart transplant patients who, post-surgery,
begin to have thoughts, memories, dreams, tastes, desires, values, mannerisms, and other
personality characteristics that they later learn correspond with those of the person
whose heart now beats in their own body.60 While the following story reads more
like a television drama than a documented medical case, its source is a credible
psychiatrist who was speaking to an international group of psychotherapists, and it is
consistent with growing numbers of documented reports from other organ recipients.43
I have a patient, an eight-year-old
little girl who received the heart of a murdered ten-year-old girl. Her mother brought her
to me when she started screaming at night about her dreams of the man who had murdered her
donor. She said her daughter knew who it was. After several sessions, I just could not
deny the reality of what this child was telling me. Her mother and I finally decided to
call the police and, using the descriptions from the little girl, they found the murderer.
He was easily convicted with evidence my patient provided. The time, the weapon, the
place, the clothes he wore, what the little girl he killed had said to him . . .
everything the little heart transplant recipient reported was completely accurate.43(p7)
While conventional paradigms cannot
account for these occurrences, it is the anomalies that reveal the shortcomings of a
paradigm and lead to its refinement. No available explanation of the heart transplant data
makes more sense than that the heart carries a field (indeed, the electrical field of the
heart is about 60 times greater in amplitude than that of the brain, and its magnetic
field according to some estimates is up to 5000 times stronger61) and
that this field holds information about the individual. |
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Six Pillars of Energy Medicine |
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Conventional medicine,
at its foundation, focuses on the biochemistry of cells, tissue, and organs. Energy
medicine, at its foundation, focuses on the fields that organize and control
the growth and repair of cells, tissues, and organs, and on ways of influencing those
fields. This affords energy medicine several strengths in comparison with the conventional
medical model. Six of these strengths can, in fact, be thought of as the pillars that
establish energy medicine as a significant development in health care. Table 1 provides an
overview of these six pillars, the premises that support them, and an example for each of
how its strength might be utilized in a clinical situation. The following discussion
focuses on each of the six pillars with greater detail, showing why the energy paradigm is
rapidly gaining strength even among conventional health care practitioners.
Pillar 1. Reach Energy medicine can address biological processes at
their energetic foundations so is able to impact the full spectrum of physical conditions.
Not just the sum of its mechanical parts, the human body
is a system of living energy. The skin discharges about 30 photons per square centimeter
per second. Each cell emits electromagnetic radiation. Electrical signals govern every
physiological process. Yet Western medicine continues to focus on the chemistry of the
body with little concern for its energies or organizing fields, and it offers primarily
pharmaceutical and surgical interventions rather than energy treatments. Leading edge
science does not, however, support this unilateral approach. The influence of energy
fields on gene expression may, in fact, prove to be at the core of energy medicines
substantial reach in healing and preventing even elusive health conditions.
According to cell biologist Bruce Lipton,
hundreds upon hundreds of scientific studies over the past fifty years have revealed that
"every facet of biological regulation" is profoundly impacted by the
"invisible forces" of the electromagnetic spectrum. He explains that specific
patterns of "electromagnetic radiation regulate DNA, RNA and protein synthesis, alter
protein shape and function, and control gene regulation, cell division, cell
differentiation, morphogenesis (the process by which cells assemble into organs and
tissues), hormone secretion, nerve growth and function," essentially the fundamental
processes that contribute to "the unfolding of life." But, he laments, "though these research studies have been
published in some of the most respected mainstream biomedical journals, their
revolutionary findings have not been incorporated into our medical school
curriculum."10 (p111) |
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Table 1
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Six Pillars of Energy Medicine (EM) |
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| Pillar |
Premise |
Practice |
1. REACH:
EM can address biological processes at their
energetic foundations so
is able to impact the full spectrum of physical conditions |
EM optimizes the energies that
surround, permeate, and support body structure (e.g., cells, organs, blood, lymph) and
body function (e.g., immunity, respiration, cardiovascular). EM methods also influence
gene expression. |
Disturbances in the energy flow
of a patient with multiple sclerosis can be corrected by holding, tapping, or massaging
specific energy points, bringing about changes in the disease process rather than the
symptom suppression of most MS treatments. |
 |
2. EFFICIENCY:
EM regulates biological processes with precision,
speed, and flexibility |
EM techniques address systemic
as well as specific disease factors, send signals that are hundreds of times faster than
chemical signals, and provide instant feedback to the practitioner so interventions can be
adjusted for intended outcomes. |
Balancing and strengthening the
energies that surround and permeate the heart of a post-coronary patient leads to an
internal environment that better supports healing and repair. |
 |
3. PRACTICALITY:
EM fosters healing and prevents illness with methods
that can be readily, economically, and non-invasively applied |
EM utilizes specific movements,
postures, and hands-on approaches that do not require high-tech equipment and do not
result in unintended side-effects. |
Assessing disturbances in the
energy flow to the kidneys of a patient with renal failure allows interventions that are
more flexible and precise than medication or surgery and can be used preventively,
circumventing damage to a vulnerable organ. |
 |
4. PATIENT EMPOWERMENT:
EM includes methods that can be utilized on an
at-home, self-help basis, fostering a stronger patient and practitioner partnership in the
healing process |
EM procedures can be
self-administered to assess systems that are out of balance, implement corrective actions,
and build resilient energy patterns throughout the body. |
Cirrhosis patients can on a
daily basis utilize techniques that balance the energies that impact the liver and enhance
its ability to heal. |
 |
5. QUANTUM
COMPATIBILITY:
EM adopts non-linear concepts consistent with distant
healing, the healing impact of prayer, and the role of intention in healing |
EM explores fields that
influence consciousness and work over a distance ("macroscopic quantum
interactions"), postulating why intention and expectation have salient outcomes, as
illustrated in the placebo effect and distant healing. |
Cancer patients can be shown
how the energies of their thoughts and imagery affect their healing, and they can be
taught techniques which engage the healing power of focused intention. |
 |
6. HOLISTIC
ORIENTATION:
EM strengthens the integration of body, mind, and
spirit, leading not only to a focus on healing, but to achieving greater well-being,
peace, and passion for life |
EM is based on the principle
that the body, mind, and spirit are integrally connected, and it promotes their harmonious
integration. |
Ulcerative colitis patients can
be shown how psychological conflicts may exacerbate their symptoms and can be provided
therapies which quickly alter the energetic foundations of those conflicts. |
|
|
What does this disregard
for the role of energy in regulating biological processes mean for contemporary medicine?
It means more invasive procedures that are at the same time less able to target underlying
causal mechanisms and less able to affect, with precision, the mechanisms62 it
can influence. For instance, when electromagnetic imbalances stimulate the body to produce
a chemical to restore balance, such as estrogen or progesterone, the chemical is produced
in the precise quantities needed and only where needed. Energy interventions designed to
produce more estrogen or progesterone produce electromagnetic signals that cause the body
to create the needed hormone using its own natural mechanisms. When medications enter the
bloodstream, on the other hand, their dosage is based on averages and guesswork, and they
travel to and impact parts of the body that are not intended, resulting for instance in
the disastrous increases in heart disease, strokes, and breast cancer among women who have
undergone hormone replacement therapy.10 Blandly called "side
effects," between 100,000 and 300,000 people in the United States die each year from
medications taken as prescribed, and unintended effects of medical treatment are by some
estimates our leading cause of death. A team that surveyed government health statistics
over the past decade concluded, "When the number one killer in a society is the
health care system, then that system has no excuse except to address its own urgent
shortcomings . . . beginning at its very foundations."63(p33)
The first pillar in energy
medicines ability to address the shortcomings of contemporary health care strategies
is in its reach, its ability to safely influence the energies that underlie all biological
processes in ways the biomedical paradigm cannot. By not having a framework for
proactively developing interventions that target the bodys energy fields,
conventional medicine fails to cultivate methods that have potential for non-invasively
influencing the control of gene expression, for the early identification and prevention of
disease, and for intervening in macro-processes such as immune function.
Pillar 2. EfficiencyEnergy interventions can regulate biological
processes with precision, speed, and flexibility. Electromagnetic frequencies are a hundred times more efficient than chemical
signals such as hormones and neurotransmitters in relaying information within biological
systems, a calculation based on research conducted in the 1970s by Oxford University
biophysicist C.W.F. McClare.64 Many of the bodys regulatory chemicals,
such as hormones, travel less than a centimeter in a second while an electromagnetic wave
could have traveled three-quarters of the distance to the moon in that time. The signals
sent via acupuncture treatments have been shown to produce information at speeds several
orders of magnitude greater than nerve impulses.45 Beyond the exponentially
greater speed of energy interventions, most of the information being transferred by
chemical diffusion is lost because so much of the operation is simply making and breaking
chemical bonds. Lipton summarizes the benefits and costs of energy treatments:
"Energy signals are 100 times more efficient and infinitely faster than physical
chemical signaling. What kind of signaling would your trillion-celled community prefer? Do
the math!"10 (p112)
Conventional medical treatments still do
not take advantage of the potent ways energy can transmit information in biological
systems (with some notable exceptions, such as the use of heart pacemakers, harmonic
frequencies that dissolve kidney stones, pulsed magnetic stimulation machines, and the use
of magnets for alleviating tendonitis, facial paralysis, and optic nerve atrophy).
Nonetheless, in another irony, conventional medicine has had no difficulty accepting
diagnostic instruments that are based on the concept of energy as information.
Energy-scanning devices analyze the frequencies of the bodys chemicals, tissues, and
organs. MRIs, EEGs, ECGs, EMGs, and CAT scans have proven their ability to non-invasively
detect illness. Healthy and unhealthy tissues have distinct electromagnetic properties
that can be detected in scanned images. Lipton observes that "diseased tissue emits
its own unique energy signature, which differs from the energy emitted by surrounding
healthy cells," and he goes on to suggest that there is enough scientific evidence to
speculate that we will be able to tailor energy and waveforms that act as therapeutic
agents "in much the same way that we now modulate chemical structures with
drugs."10(p119)
Energy medicine practitioners already, often without the use of
mechanical devices, purportedly identify imbalances in the bodys energies and
directly intervene so the waveform patterns emitted by diseased tissue or other
malfunctioning systems are modified and surrounded by energy fields that exert a
therapeutic effect. To the extent that such procedures can be refined and taught, energy
medicine will offer interventions that are substantially more precise than medication and
more flexible and non-invasive than surgery, significantly reducing the time involved in
the healing process without producing unwanted side effects.
Pillar 3. Practicalityenergy
medicine fosters healing and prevents illness with interventions that can be
readily, economically, and non-invasively applied. The ability to sense and
correct energy imbalances has historically been tied to survival. Tribal people could
detect whether the energies of a recently encountered plant were noxious before ingesting
it. Indigenous medicine is oriented toward keeping the body healthy by keeping its
energies flowing and in harmony. As the Nobel-prize winning biochemist Albert
Szent-Györgyi observed, "In every culture and in every medical tradition before
ours, healing was accomplished by moving energy."65 In traditional Chinese
medicine, you kept the body healthy by keeping the energy fields that support it healthy.
Because disturbed energies lead to corresponding disturbances in the physical body
(somewhat like the way the energy field carried by a salamander embryo is the blueprint
for the adult), maintaining healthy energies is seen as the path for maintaining health
and preventing illness. In some provinces of ancient China, in fact, you paid the
physician when you were healthy. If you got sick, the physician would work hard to try to
cure your illness, but you did not have to pay because the physician had failed to keep
your energy field healthy enough to prevent the illness.
Norman Shealy and Dawson Church have
identified four ways that energy can be systematically introduced into the healing
process.66 The first is a form of energy that is generated mechanically, such
as the spark produced by pressing the button on a gas-grill lighter. Called
piezoelectricity (derived from the Greek word piezein, which means "to squeeze
or press"), it is based on the way that pressure placed on certain materials is
converted into electricity. Current can be generated by placing pressure on crystalline
structures, which include the bones, tendons, and collagen. This, in fact, is the basis of
acupuncture, acupressure, and the massaging or tapping of energy points, and the
piezoelectrical energy that is produced can be conducted through the bodys
connective tissue.47 A second way that energy can be used in healing is by
surrounding tissue with an electromagnetic field. When a healers hands or a magnetic
device are held over a part of the body, the energy within the tissue can, at least in
theory, be brought back into alignment and balance. A third approach is to actually send
electrical impulses through the body, as is accomplished with heart pacemakers and pulsed
magnetic stimulation machines.67 A final approach, which is highly speculative
yet necessary to explain oddities such as "distance healing"68 and
other non-local effects involves "macrolevel quantum fields."69
While a range of interventions using electrical devices, magnets,
crystals, needles, aromas, and ingested substances are all used in energy medicine, the
tool used by the largest number of practitioners for intentionally moving and harmonizing
the bodys energies and fields is the human hand. Many of the interventions found in
the fields standard texts and manuals2,70,71,72 are, in fact, hands-on
approaches designed to bring balance and harmony to the bodys energy fields. A
practitioner can tap, massage, pinch, twist, or connect specific energy points on the
skin. Because everyones hands carry a measurable electromagnetic charge, specific
areas of the body can be surrounded with the hands to produce a field effect, or the hands
can be used to move and align the bodys energies by tracing specific energy pathways
along the skin.
Other non-invasive and readily accessible interventions include the use
of specific postures and movements that have beneficial effects on the bodys energy
system. Such non-invasive treatments might routinely be considered in health care
settings, in accord with the principle that the least invasive measure likely to impact an
illness should be the first applied.73 These low-tech procedures are not only
readily available and easily added to the practitioners treatment repertoire with a
modicum of continuing education, their purported preventive and non-invasive qualities
promise that they may also be highly cost-effective in contrast to the rapidly rising
costs of conventional medicine and its deleterious impact on the economy.
Pillar 4. Patient
EmpowermentEnergy medicine includes methods that can be utilized on an at-home,
self-help basis, fostering a stronger patient and practitioner partnership in the healing
process. Energy medicine uses the term "energy" in two senses. Energy is
the medicine, and energy is also the patient. You heal the body by
activating its natural healing energies (energy as the "medicine"), and you also
heal the body by restoring energies that have become weak, disturbed, or out of balance
(energy as the "patient"). People can be shown a variety of exercises or
postures that are designed for specific energy effects in both senses. They can
self-administer techniques that activate their own inner healer in a generic manner and
that also bring balance to specific energy systems that are needing attention.
Energy medicine is typically delivered in
any of three contexts: 1) as an independent system for addressing physical problems, 2) as
a complement to other approaches to health care, and 3) as a set of procedures for
self-care and self-help. Using energy medicine as a self-care approach, individuals can
learn to assess whether certain key energy systems are out of balance, to implement
corrective procedures, and to build resilient energy patterns for the prevention of
illness. While traditional medicine may recommend exercise, a healthy diet, stress
reduction, and other common sense steps for better health, its core procedures are
medication, radiation, and surgery, and these must be administered by the health care
professional. Energy medicine, on the other hand, which recognizes energy as a vital,
living, moving force in each individual, lends itself to being self-administered. It is
inherently democratic. The bodys healing energies are free, everyones
birthright. Energy medicine teaches people to marshal these energies to counter illness
and enhance health.
Pillar 5. Quantum
CompatibilityEnergy medicine adopts non-linear concepts consistent with distant
healing, the healing impact of prayer, and the role of intention in healing. A
great incongruity in Western medicine is that its core paradigm is a century behind the
paradigm used by modern physics. Einsteins piercing formula showing that energy and
matter are interchangeable was published in 1905. More than a scientific technicality,
this discovery revealed that a Newtonian physics which focuses on the mechanics of life
gives us only a glimpse into a larger story. The darkest implications of the discovery
that energy and matter are interchangeable burst into our collective psyche on August 6,
1945, when the tale of Prometheus, who stole fire from the gods, became the terrifying
mythic dilemma of an unwitting humanity that suddenly possessed the power to destroy
itself. But the realization that the billiard ball-like atoms of a century ago are really
composed of packets of energyunique in their distribution of positive and negative
charges, spin rate, and vibrational pattern3is also about to
revolutionize some of our most cherished Promethean inventions, such as televisions, cell
phones, and computers, all originally based on electromagnetic effects.
As scientists are able to peer more and more deeply into the
unimaginably miniscule building blocks of nature, such as quarks, baryons, and mesons,
some are speculating that at its base, matter may not be made of particles at allit
may be more like strings of vibrating energy.74 The physical body itself is
continually vibrating and resonating with other energies in the environment. While Western
medicine has developed few interventions that are based in the recognition that energy is
at the foundation of, or at least intimately intertwined with physical matter, scientists
from many other disciplines are working within this perspective. They are, for example,
recognizing the potential explanatory power of fields that are "totally unlike any of
those presently known"1(p17) in the ways they hold and transmit
information, display quantum properties such as non-local influence, and interact with
consciousness. Although natures strong and weak quantum forces are understood to
have their effects only in the subatomic world, hypothesized fields whose actions on
biological systems work at a distance through "macroscopic quantum interactions"
have been formulated69,75
Such fields might parsimoniously explain, for instance, the beneficial
effects of prayer and distant healing that have been widely observed and amply documented76
as well as the role of intention, placebo effect, and other psychological factors in
health and healing. The impact of human intention on physical systems within as well as
beyond the body of the person holding the intention is another anomaly that simultaneously
reveals a shortcoming of the conventional medical paradigm and highlights a strength of
the energy medicine paradigm. In a classic example, experimental subjects, after being
instructed in how to use visualization to inhibit the breakdown of red blood cells in a
test tube located in a different room achieved statistically significant results in their
efforts to slow the rate of cell deterioration.77 Experiments demonstrating the
role of intention on physical and social processes range from focused thoughts affecting
seed germination28 to highly significant reductions in crime rates after groups
of meditators were deployed to troubled neighborhoods.78
Pillar 6. Holistic
OrientationEnergy medicine strengthens the integration of body, mind, and spirit,
leading not only to a focus on healing but to achieving greater well-being, peace, and
passion for life. An essential difference between energy medicine and conventional
medicine involves the concepts of diagnosis and treatment. Energy medicine is concerned
with the person as an integrated energetic system, impacting body, mind, and spirit.
"Diagnosis" focuses on disruptions and imbalances in the bodys energy
system. For instance, there is some evidence that, with cancer, the energies tend to be
disorganized and lacking in coherence, while with multiple sclerosis, they tend to be so
highly ordered as to lack flexibility.79 "Treatment" is not of the
disease or its symptoms per se. It is rather designed to correct such energetic
imbalances. Symptoms provide clues for determining the nature of the imbalances and a
measure of whether the treatment is succeeding, but they are not the primary focus. For
instance, where conventional medicine treats kidney disease by focusing on the organ
itself (thus leaving medication and surgery as the most obvious choices), in energy
medicine, the treatment focuses on the energy systems that impact the kidneys.
Such energies are not necessarily limited
to the kidneys. They are often systemic, running throughout the body. Energy medicine, in
fact, offers many methods that instantaneously impact the entire body. The mechanism by
which it is possible for energy interventions to have this "holistic" influence
is the bodys connective tissue, which is, for many healers, thought of as a
communication medium.3 According to Church, "Every organ of your body
is encased within the bodys largest organ, which functions as a liquid crystal
semiconductor" that processes information by being able "to store
energy, amplify signals, filter information, and to move information in one
direction but not in another."29(pp137-138) With the connective tissue
acting as a giant liquid crystal electrical semiconductor, energy interventions can
simultaneously be brought to every cell of the body.
This whole-body effect carries significant advantages. For instance, as
discussed earlier, when medications meant to correct chemical imbalances in a specific
area of the body move through the bloodstream, they often inadvertently upset chemical
balances in untargeted organs and systems. When energy interventions are applied, on the
other hand, they are conducted through the connective tissue, so the information is
simultaneously received throughout the body. This allows the energies that have been
introduced to be coordinated with the bodys entire energy system, resulting in
harmonious self-regulation. Serious side effects from responsible hands-on energy
interventions are, in fact, rarely if ever seen, with the most frequently reported
difficulties involving too much energy being moved too quickly for a physically unstable
person to readily accommodate.
Not only do energy medicine interventions allow for rapid signaling
activity throughout the body that, according to its practitioners, is clinically safe,
energy medicine is also holistic in its apparent ability to bridge body, mind, and spirit.
The influence of the mind on the bodys health is well-established. In a thirty-five
year longitudinal study, people with a pessimistic explanatory style80 were at
greater risk for physical illness than individuals with an optimistic explanatory style.
The power of thought on biological processes is decisive and direct. Focused intention can
literally wind or unwind the tightness of DNA strands, leading to speculation that DNA
acts as an "antenna" attuned to fields and thought processes that ultimately
influence the expression of specific genes.81 Energy medicine and energy
psychology (energy psychology is a specialty within energy medicine in the sense that
psychiatry is a specialty within conventional medicine) provide methods that attempt to
directly influence the energies that are involved in psychological processes.
Using this approach, it is possible to address emotional problems in
ways that promote robust psychological functioning.82 This positions energy
therapy as an unusually direct and powerful method for working with the principles being
generated within behavioral medicine and health psychology.83 In addition, many
of the ancient traditions being revisited via energy medicine were spiritual disciplines
as well as healing modalities, and some practitioners speculate that the energies they
invoke are a bridge into the world of spirit.84 Meanwhile, medical systems
based in the biomedical paradigm have to struggle against the paradigm itself to
incorporate the decisive findings and health implications regarding the impact of
consciousness, intention, and subtle energies on physical processes. |
|
Conclusions and Future Research |
|
|
Many ancient healing
practices that conceptualize "energy" as a critical component in their
actionsfrom acupuncture to meditation to yoga to qigongare, according to Kim
Jobst, Editor of The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine:
"withstanding the test of time and emerging into the realms of biomedicine because,
not only does anecdote testify to the practices benefits to patients . . . emerging
technology can demonstrate objective effectiveness according to the . . . criteria for
what constitutes scientific evidence."85(p1-2) Research evidence indeed
exists demonstrating the efficacy of acupuncture,86 acupressure,87
Therapeutic Touch,30 Healing Touch,88 Reiki,72 qigong,89
intentional healing,90 and other forms of energy medicine,91 but
their clash with conventional medicines paradigm has, to a large degree, prevented
these modalities from being integrated into mainstream health care. The six pillars
discussed in this paper beckon health care providers to consider facilitating such
integration.
While subtle energies and organizing fields still for the most part
elude contemporary scientific instrumentation, the clinical outcomes of interventions by
practitioners who believe they are working with those energies and fields can be measured.
In addition to the studies supporting each of the specific energy medicine modalities
cited above, examples focused on energy medicine interventions with specified health
conditions include improvement in the symptoms of fibromyalgia following qigong therapy,92
improvement in health-related quality of life measures in cancer patients undergoing
radiation therapy who were provided Healing Touch treatments,93 increased
strength, balance, and flexibility in adults with cardiovascular disease risk factors
following tai chi,94 and improved cardiovascular function following
acupressure.95
Experiments could also be devised to test
of each of the six pillars. Empirical demonstration of their strengths would be a timely
contribution given the seemingly plausible claims of energy medicine practitioners
regarding the potential benefits of integrating energy interventions into mainstream
practice. The following research questions, one for each of the six pillars, are
formulated to encourage such studies:
1. What are the effects of twice-weekly
energy medicine treatments on gene expression as measured by "gene chips,"96
as well as the disease course, with patients diagnosed with multiple sclerosis as compared
with matched patients receiving conventional treatment only? (1st Pillar,
Reach).
2. Do energy medicine treatments before and after surgery significantly
enhance recovery and reduce recovery time in comparison with matched patients who do not
receive energy medicine treatments? (2nd Pillar, Efficiency).
3. Does offering a randomly selected group of employees of a company
daily 20-minute energy balancing sessions impact job performance, baseline lab test health
indicators, and medical service utilization over a two-year period as compared with
randomly-selected employees who are offered a daily 20-minute calisthenics program and
another with no special treatment? (3rd Pillar, Practicality).
4. Does introducing an at-home energy balancing regimen to cancer
patients receiving radiation treatment reduce side effects in comparison with matched
patients not using such methods? (4th Pillar, Patient Empowerment).
5. Can the waveform patterns associated with diseased tissue be
modified through the use of "distant healing," and do the modified waveform
patterns correspond with subsequent tissue repair? (5th Pillar, Quantum
Compatibility).
6. Do energy interventions that focus on psychological conflicts in
patients with cardiovascular disease lead to more rapid improvement according to physical
makers than matched controls who do not receive such treatment? (6th Pillar,
Holistic Orientation).
Even as energy medicine practitioners
continue to operate largely outside of conventional medical institutions (though the
routine use of methods such as Reiki, Healing Touch, and Therapeutic Touch is seen in
growing numbers of hospitals and The American Academy of Medical Acupuncture has more than
1600 physicians in its membership), each of these experiments could readily be conducted
and would shed substantial light on the strengths, limitations, and comparative value of
an energy medicine approach. Meanwhile, the six pillars outlined in this paper have been
demonstrated in many practice settings as being operational, relevant, and available for
implementation. While the discipline is still establishing its strengths and range of
application, enough is already known to conclude that conventional health care practices
could be substantially strengthened by embracing energy medicine. |
|
|
|
Interactive footnotes
available in printable
version in .pdf format |
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| The authors gratefully acknowledges comments on earlier drafts of
this paper by Dawson Church, Ph.D., Jeffrey K. Harris, M.D., Ronald E. Matthews, M.S.,
Vicki Matthews, N.D., Douglas J. Moore, Ph.D., Judith Orloff, M.D., and James Oschman,
Ph.D.
David Feinstein, Ph.D., a clinical
psychologist, is the national director of the Energy Medicine Institute, based in Ashland,
Oregon. Author of seven books and more than fifty professional papers, he has taught at
The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and Antioch College. Among his major works
are The Promise of Energy Psychology (co-authored with his wife, Donna Eden, and
Gary Craig), The Mythic Path, and Rituals for Living and Dying. His
multi-media Energy Psychology Interactive was a recipient of the Outstanding
Contribution Award from the Association for Comprehensive Energy Psychology. The American
Psychological Association's book review journal applauded the work for providing "a
lucid foundation for a growing interest in integrative psychology" and "a
valuable expansion of the traditional biopsychosocial model of psychology to include the
dimension of energy."
Donna Eden, a pioneer in the field
of holistic healing, is among the worlds most sought, most joyous, and most authoritative
spokespersons for energy medicine. Her abilities as a healer are legendary, and she has
taught some fifty thousand people world-wide, both laypeople and professionals, how to
understand the body as an energy system. Since childhood, she has been able to see the
flow of the bodys energies, and from this clairvoyant ability, she has developed a
system for teaching others, who do not have this gift, to productively work with
their bodys energies. Her best-selling book, Energy Medicine, has been
translated into 10 languages, and is a classic in its field. According to Carolyn Myss:
"The contribution Donna Eden has made with Energy Medicine will stand as one
of the backbone studies as we lay a sound foundation for the field of holistic
medicine." |
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Printable Version in .pdf format
En
Français .pdf
Also of interest: Energy Medicine in a Nutshell
& Energy
Psychology in Disaster Relief |
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