Explore related therapies
Every cell, tissue, and organ carries an energetic pattern, constantly signalling and responding. The body functions through these patterns. When these patterns become distorted, the body can fall out of balance, which we experience as illness.
Therapies like homeopathy and bioresonance “imprint” the body with frequencies and patterns to restore its natural state of balance.
Bioresonance
Bioresonance is a holistic therapy that was developed in the 1970s by Franz Morell and Erich Rasche. It is based on the idea that every cell, organ, and tissue in the body emits a unique electromagnetic frequency (or “vibration”). When these frequencies become disrupted by factors such as stress, toxins, infections, or disease, the body can become out of balance.
Bioresonance devices
Using a device such as the Mora Nova or BICOM, disturbances are detected. Then the bioresonance device sends harmonizing frequencies back to the body to restore balance. This would eliminate the disturbances and thereby improve communication between cells and stimulate the body’s self-healing ability. Bioresonance is, in effect, real-time imprinting the body with the desired frequencies.
Homeopathy
Homeopathy is one of the oldest known methods using information transfer through water. Homeopathy is based on the idea of “like cures like,” invented by Samuel Hahnemann in the 18th century. A homeopathic gel (for example, with arnica or other herbs) works according to these principles as follows:
Dilution and potentization
The active substance (e.g. a plant extract) is extremely diluted in water or alcohol, often until almost nothing is left of it. During the dilution, the mixture is shaken or “potentized” (vigorously stirred). The idea is that this transfers the “energetic information” or “memory” of the substance to the carrier (such as water or gel), without the chemical substance itself.
Effect on the body
According to homeopathy, the gel stimulates the body to heal itself. It would give a “signal – information” to your immune system or energy fields, so that it reacts to symptoms (e.g. pain, swelling or itching). For example, an arnica gel would “imitate” inflammations to prompt the body to repair. The effect is subtle and holistic – not like a chemical pill that directly blocks or numbs.