A BICOM practitioner tests whether his
patient has a wheat allergy. Photo John Pint
By John Pint
Bioresonance is one of many alternative approaches to medicine widely
available in Mexico. My attention was first brought to it by a neighbor
who told me the story of a friend of his, a Canadian Olympic gold medal
winner, who was bit by a tick near Toronto, turning him into something
of a zombie for two years until he was pulled out of his fog by a
one-month-long treatment of antibiotics. Informed that the law forbade
the prescription of more than a month of antibiotics, he searched for
alternatives and was told that “the Rife machine” could cure Lyme
disease…. and that someone happened to have one of those machines in
the town of Niagara Falls.
The athlete drove to Niagara Falls and in three months was cured.
The Rife machine—built by US microscope inventor Royal Raymond Rife in
the 1920s—is just one of several independently developed devices that I
have become acquainted with in Mexico. Another is the Obermax, which is
based on the Metatron machine, developed at the Institute of Practical
Psychophysics, Omsk, Russia, to diagnose and treat their cosmonauts at
what can truly be called a long distance. A third device, the Tesla
Scalar Wave machine, transmits scalar energy, which was discovered by
Maxwell and experimented with by Tesla.
A neon
bulb burns brightly when held in the hand
of anyone connected to a Tesla Scalar Wave machine. Photo John Pint.
Everything
vibrates
Such devices fall under the general name of bioresonance machines. They
claim to take advantage of what quantum physics says about the
universe, that everything is made up of waves, and that every item
vibrates at its own frequency, including for example the bacterium that
causes Lyme disease.
Royal Rife’s germ destroyer
Royal Rife’s approach was to blast that bacterium to smithereens by
hitting it with a strong wave of the same frequency, much like an opera
singer is said to shatter a wine glass by hitting just the right note.
Royal
Rife, born in 1888, built powerful
microscopes in the 1920s and 30s as well as a "ray-beam" device that he
claimed could destroy microorganisms.
A popular bioresonance machine in Mexico
is the BICOM. Unlike the Rife
machine, the BICOM deals with an unwanted bacterium, fungus, parasite,
or whatever, by hitting it with the exact inverse of its waveform. This
device was developed by the Regumed Medical Technology Company
(Planegg, Germany) which has been around since 1987. Today, they say,
it is used by more than 30,000 therapists in over 90 countries around
the world.
Testing for allergies with
Bioresonance
I asked a BICOM practitioner in Guadalajara—whom I will call Patrick
O'Reilly—for a practical example of how the machine helped a patient of
his.
“I’ll call her Irina,” said O'Reilly. “She lived in the USA, but came
to me here in Mexico complaining of her allergy to pollen.”
Thousands of tiny ampoules
O'Reilly had Irina sit on a mat which generates an electromagnetic
field used for transferring frequency information to the body. On
shelves on the opposite wall of his office, he has several thousand
small ampoules containing tiny samples of just about anything you can
think of, from poison ivy and peanuts to dead parasites.
Trays containing thousands of ampoules
used for diagnosing medical problems. Photo John Pint.
In the case of Irina, he started with a Key Ampoule Kit which helps
identify the main stressors in the body causing the allergic condition.
Each ampoule contains a “cocktail” of frequencies for that stress.
Parasite Stress, for example, has a mix of the main categories of
parasites. The Key Ampoules then allowed him to move to more detailed
kits testing for allergies to a wide variety of causes, for example
airborne substances or contaminants in foods, such as preservatives,
pesticides, herbicides or colorants.
A
few of the many ampoules used to determine allergy issues. Photo John
Pint.
Chernobyl
exposure
Moving then to more specific ampoules, O’Reilly found that Irina’s
allergy to pollen was masking a deeper problem... The BICOM machine
indicated exposure to radioactivity.
Irina, O’Reilly went on, then told him that she had been born in Russia
and she confirmed that she had indeed been exposed to radioactivity…
from the Chernobyl disaster in 1986.
Other allergy ampoules indicated that Irina also had a problem with
wheat and the mold on her bathroom wall.
O'Reilly then used the BICOM machine to generate opposite frequencies
to neutralize Irina's stresses. He also imprinted therapy frequencies
into water and gave her three dropper bottles (each at a different
frequency) which she took back with her to the USA. O'Reilly has his
patients place a few drops under their tongue, perhaps three times a
day.
"I also prescribed a food supplement and clays for foot baths, for
draining toxins out through her legs," said O'Reilly, “but nowadays I
suggest Ionic foot baths.”
In the end, Irina experienced great relief from her problems, as did
two others of O’Reilly’s patients, who told me that his treatment had
alleviated them of severe, nonstop coughing after only a few sessions.
Bioresonance, O’Reilly adds, is non-invasive and works in a way similar
to homeopathy and acupuncture: stimulating the body to heal itself.
In contrast to the statements of these Mexican patients, the medical
establishment has little positive to say about bioresonance. The
opinion of British-German academic physician and researcher Edzard
Ernst is frequently cited. Bioresonance therapy, he says, “can be seen
as an attempt to present nonsense as science.”
The American Medical Association’s reaction to the Rife machine was far
harsher. Labs were burned down, devices were confiscated and
practitioners were arrested.
If you want to check out bioresonance for yourself, Mexico is a good
place to do it. Want to see one of these devices? Just Google
“biorresonancia” (two r’s) and the name of your nearest big town.
¡Buena suerte!
A patient connected to a Rife machine.
Photo John Pint.
Text and Photos © 2024 by John & Susy Pint unless
otherwise indicated.
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