Dr Albert Abrams was one of the foremost neurologists of his day. Educated to medical school standards with first class honors, he wrote medical textbooks and was revered as a teacher.
Abrams discovered that all matter emits electromagnetic frequencies and created a system enabling remote diagnosis from blood or hair samples.
Origins
Albert Abrams radionics can be traced back to an American physician named Albert Abrams. Born into a wealthy San Francisco family, Abrams gave much of his inheritance away in order to help others. After earning a medical degree with distinction in Heidelberg Germany and becoming one of America’s leading experts on diseases of the nervous system he believed that each illness had its own energy signature that could be detected; his method relied on this recognition of these specific energies patterns which was then given the name ‘Radionics‘ due its combination of RADIation and ELECtronICS components.
Abrams created several instruments to assist his work, such as a machine that could identify diseases by monitoring vibrations of their blood, while also drawing upon aspects of Eastern philosophy and occultism to support his theory that disease was caused by negative energies. Chiropractor Ruth Drown later added another stage to radionics by discovering it could treat illness remotely, with later endorsement from George de la Warr and T. Galen Hieronymus and Malcolm Rae’s research into Radionics instrumentation.
To receive remote treatments, patients would send in a token – this may include hair, writing samples or photos – which would then be delivered via mail to a practitioner who would use a “black box” scanner to scan it and identify which disease needed treating.
Abrams was met with similar criticism of his ideas when first presented – being ahead of his time he was dismissed by those in established science as unproveable and condemned before they can even be tested properly. No one ever knew if Abrams’ technique worked until after his death due to pneumonia complications in 1924.
Symptoms
Dr Albert Abrams (1863 – 1924), an American physician, developed an innovative system of diagnosis and healing by identifying energy patterns associated with different illnesses. His concepts went far beyond what was common knowledge at his time.
Abrams was one of the first people to develop calibrated instruments capable of aiding in the detection of disease radiations, which he termed radiesthesia and designed various devices to aid it. Abrams also invented a physical medicine technique known as Spondylotherapy which was heavily influenced by chiropractic and osteopathy practices.
Radionics practitioners can identify imbalances in an individual’s energy field (commonly referred to as their aura) that contribute to symptoms and can detect these via extrasensory perception, which allows practitioners to access information not available directly through conscious reasoning.
Abrams realized early on in his practice that diagnosing patients did not require them being physically present. Instead, samples could be taken from blood, hair, fingernail clippings or handwriting samples and placed into a metal cup connected to an input on his variable resistance box, or Reflexophone as it was commonly known.
Abrams experimented with adding resistance wire into one of the circuits that linked input to output in order to increase and intensify percussive sounds produced by his Reflexophone, creating what became known as rheostats.
Abrams discovered that turning down the rheostat produced a stronger and clearer sound which allowed him to use remote diagnosis with it. Furthermore, Abrams observed that each organ of our bodies broadcast frequencies which could then be used by his Oscilloclast device to pulse individuals with opposing frequencies in order to treat disease.
Treatment
Dr. Albert Abrams Radionics provides treatments in two distinct fields – physical therapy and energy medicine. Energy medicine employs techniques designed to restore balance to one’s energy fields and promote natural healing processes within the body, often being combined with conventional medical treatments as part of an integrative approach towards treating patient symptoms and conditions.
Abrams pioneered radionics by devising an extensive physical diagnosis method which utilized percussion and palpation. He discovered a strong correlation between certain areas of the body and certain pathological conditions and their percussive sounds produced during percussion tests; their sounds differ depending on whether disease was present; this required that patients stand with their abdomen bared which proved particularly challenging in cases where disease was severe.
Abrams invented several devices, such as the “dynamizer”, to diagnose patients by tapping on them and listening for sounds that indicated illness. Other inventions by Abrams included the oscilloclast, biodynamometer and reflexophone; all were founded upon his theory that human bodies are living energetic systems connected by an energy matrix.
As Abrams became well-known, people from around the world sought his diagnosis of their ailments. Since many were too ill to travel, Abrams devised a system enabling patients to send blood specimens for examination – discovering that the blood carried all radiations of a body and could allow him to diagnose someone remotely.
Abrams was one of America’s foremost experts on diseases of the nervous system in the late 1800s, yet his ideas fell outside conventional medical thinking and quickly made him an outcast from mainstream medicine. Even as his work was subject to ridicule and even outlawed in certain countries, many scientists continued expanding on its basic principles; today this field is known as radioonics in his honor.
Conclusions
Radionics, commonly referred to as Energy or Vibrational Medicine, is a noninvasive healing therapy used for physical and psychological ailments alike. While not meant to replace conventional medicine altogether, Radionics can supplement it and expedite healing (when used under guidance from a qualified medical provider). Furthermore, its uses extend beyond people – radionics can be utilized to heal animals, plants, soil and more!
Abrams initially relied on physical examination to detect disease patterns. He observed that healthy tissues produced different sounds from those affected by illness, leading him to believe there must be reflex connections between healthy organs and specific areas of his abdomen. Utilizing this information, Abrams devised a system whereby various symptoms would produce their percussive sound pattern in relation to patients of each symptom group so he could differentiate among them more accurately.
Later, he applied his discoveries to electronic modalities. Utilizing a device with variable resistance arrangement, he could distinguish vibrations of diseases against those from healthy tissue. After creating tables of rates and frequencies for each disease, this allowed him to diagnose and treat patients from a distance.
Ruth Drown was one of Abrams’ students and built on his work. She integrated eastern beliefs about life force energy into analysis and treatment procedures as well as creating an instrument called Radionic which allowed for long distance transmission of healing energies for diagnosis and treatment of diseases remotely.
Radionics has since spread throughout England and other European nations, but still remains unaccepted and banned by certain medical establishments in some places. Albert Abrams’ legacy gives hope that one day subtle energy medicine may become scientifically accepted as an established discipline.
Before that happens, though, all those interested in healing should remain mindful of alternative healing approaches and recognize any signals that point toward better health.