Monday, 13 July 2009

How does CLRT work?



Its great to get all these positive testimonials but how does light on the head affect somewhere else in the body so profoundly? Dr Wise puts it really well in his manual and I summarise it here, and in an article I have written for the August issue of Positive Health.

Taking the example of an acute ankle sprain, Dr Wise discovered that a soft tissue problem causes the anterior leg muscle cranial reflex to "blow out" like a fuse. Over time, this injury should heal properly, but if the reflex is still active, then it takes longer to heal and has a much higher chance of becoming a chronically unstable ankle, prone to more twisting. Correcting the ankle cranial reflex as soon as possible causes an immediate reduction in pain and a massive speeding up of the healing process.

Light and the DNA
But how does light work, as opposed to just pressing the cranial reflex points, which can also help. Some of the best research on light comes from Fritz-Albert Popp at the Institute of Biophysics, in Germany. In a nutshell, electrical and chemical interactions are far too slow to account for the speed of information flow in the human body. A cellular communication system based on light delivers the tremendous amount of processing power and flexibility needed to run such a complex system. Our information biofield, our biohologram, is projected by our DNA molecules as they change shape. The springy DNA coil winds or unwinds due to signals from the environment (see Bruce Lipton PhD), and this conformational change squeezes out single-photon "laser beams" which carry vibrationally encoded information easily decoded by the receiving cells.
These photons travel through the body's fiber-optic cables, which are made up of optically transparent microtubules, which collectively form the classical acupuncture meridian system. The information that the photons carry is vibrational, which the receiving cell Fourier transforms into relevant information.

So there you go. After all you can have light free on the National Health Service here in the UK in the form of Photo Dynamic Therapy (PDT). Light and photosensitive drugs are used to target certain cancer cells (not all conditions are covered yet), and eliminate them with no loss of healthy cells. Only thing is not many people know about it, and PDT is the poor relation when it comes to funding, even though there is less damage done elsewhere in the body, and recovery times are quicker.

Right now I have rented out a Q10 to a patient of a Q1000 practitioner/osteopath, who is having radiotherapy for breast cancer. Her expectations are high, having seen her scar from breast removal eliminated after using the Q1000 Low Level Laser.
So far after a week of radiotherapy, and daily use of the cold laser, she has had no unpleasant side effects or pain.

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