In an attempt to shift perceptions concerning health care, the Institute of BioAcoustic Biology & Sound Health, is reporting novel research that supports the assertion that ancient architectures and languages contain math codes that support frequency-based cellular regeneration. The idea of revisiting lost knowledge through the use of computer assembled biometrics provides a new paradigm that may change the face of future medicine.
It usually takes a well-funded scientific breakthrough or an overwhelming catastrophe to facilitate a comprehensive change that actually makes a difference. People are slow to embrace new scientific information because anything fundamentally different from the status quo intimidates them. Although a major disaster forces transformation, people don’t always adjust willingly. The most profound and permanent way to cause a shift in perception is through affirmative life experience.
Known as Human BioAcoustics and Vocal Profiling, this innovative biotechnology is the inspiration of a uniquely talented pioneer, Sharry Edwards, MEd.
It has been written that many great thinkers have attempted to decode the mysteries of the universe using math, geometry, music, frequency and architecture. The recent popularity of the movie: The daVinci Code and Dan Brown’s last book, The Symbol, has sparked our imaginations concerning information that has been kept hidden from the populace. While Brown’s book hints at architecture as hidden knowledge, Edwards’ work proves that the ancient Templar cross contains math codes that support cellular rejuvenation.
Providing a mathematical matrix of the frequency field of the body is very important to our future of understanding physics. Edwards’ research provides many of the answers concerning Pythagorean string theory and how it can be combined with modern string theory to explain how DNA “strings” can be dominated using frequency.
Using frequency as an intrinsic healing modality is an ancient tool brought forward into the modern era through BioAcoustic Biology; a major innovation that allows a look at wellness through individual biofrequency assessment.
In the near future, biofrequencies, as an indicator of health, will soon become as common as taking your temperature or blood pressure when you visit your health care provider. MIT, several universities and Pfizer Pharmaceuticals are working with these principles; with AT&T declaring that “bioacoustics is the medicine of the future”.
This ancient idea combined with modern technology utilizes the premise that the body can identify and prescribe for itself using the algorithms of vocalized frequencies to accurately quantify, organize, and extrapolate biometric information.
Studies conducted at the non-profit BioAcoustic Research Institute have shown that persons with similar stresses, toxins, diseases, traumas, genetic syndromes, deficiencies…have similar, if not identical, vocal anomalies; demonstrating that math can be much more than a measurement tool. Math, as a frequency matrix, can serve as the template to perceive and manage health and wellness.
Known as Vocal Profiling, the idea of analyzing the frequencies and modulation of a human voice to determine emotional, biochemical and structural status of a person is being used by medical facilities and schools; for military applications; in police work for verification purposes; in research studies for issues thought to be incurable, to determine wellness patterns; to relieve the stress of pain; to determine exposure to toxins and pathogens. From working with the firefighter’s union and engineers at ground zero, to assisting physicians in determining the potential cause of health related mysteries, this novel work is Star Trek medicine in the making.
“The list of how vocal analysis can be used seems endless and provides an avenue for the integration of energy medicine with the allopathic approach,” states Roman Chrucky, MD. Dr. Chrucky credits this innovative approach with predicting his heart attack and for helping his body reverse a diagnosis of prostate cancer. “My experiences with this technique are very real because they have made a difference in my own life and those of my patients. I’m very happy with this work and very happy that Sharry has stuck to these ideas in the face of much adversity. In my opinion she’s the doctor’s doctor. I send all my perplexing patients to her even though by definition, what she does is not medicine.”
Edwards and her dedicated staff have attempted to organize a network of people who are being trained in these techniques so that a groundswell of people can attend to their own communities should a health catastrophe occur. She cites the threat of a pathogenic pandemic or assistance in space travel as examples of how this system could be of service to establish the idea of Math as Medicine.
Edwards believes that we seek to gather information showing us how to be authentic, enlightened beings because we strive to live in grace and wisdom in support of a better future. Dissatisfaction leads to the opportunity for change and the present discontent with health care shows that the system is in need of transformation.