Summary: The text discusses the nuances of coMra therapy, particularly the use of different frequencies for various body parts, highlighting the concept of resonance. It acknowledges that individual responses to treatment can vary, emphasizing the personalized nature of the healing process. The speakers also touch upon the complexity of the body's electrical and frequency-based aspects, which are not yet fully understood.
You'll notice throughout the book, there's a couple of things that seem, huh, I wonder why that's different than, let's say, 50 hertz on the kidneys rather than 5. And let's say, treating that muscle there at 5 hertz rather than 50. And I can't confirm this through lots of studies, but there's also the issue of resonance. So if you look at treating the brain, there's a resonance at 50 hertz more than 5 hertz. You look at treating the there's resonance at 5 hertz more than 50. And I've read some research about it, but I can't confirm it. So just to think about -- because once you start going past the biochemical into the electrical and frequencies and stuff, things start to look a lot different with the body. So just to keep that in mind, there's also this level of occurrence that's not been deeply researched yet. You can see the effects of the differences, but the actual mechanisms because you start getting into, well, like I say, resonant frequencies as an example, but not so much standard electricity resonant frequencies. But if you look at a liver, all of those cells at some level are resonating at a certain frequency that they all become liver cells. And when you look at nervous tissue, do you see what I'm pointing to? Yes, I do. And that's a whole other level of understanding, isn't it? Yes. But we don't really want to go into that in this course. Because it goes -- yes. Thank you. And one of the things I've noticed too, you could have the exact same condition and one person responds to 50 better than five. There's always this other element where nothing is going to be neat and tidy, boxed up, packaged, ready to go. Yeah. Because it's a journey for all of us.