The intervention of Man, together with increasing environmental damage have, for a long time now, been exerting a greater and greater impact on our ecosystems. Forests and agricultural areas are particularly affected.
Resonance therapy is a procedure for large-scale revitalisation of low-vitality ecosystems. There was no comparable method of treating sick woodland areas covering over 10,000 hectares prior to development of it.
Treatment of ecosystems of this size is made possible by the phenomenon of resonance between similar systems. Treatment is performed in the Institute's laboratory and comprises transfer of information to the ecosystem via a model, i.e. an aerial photograph or topographical map of the area. The photograph and ecosystem are similar so a resonance can be established between them by positioning of the model correctly.
The information transferred to the model is transmitted directly to the treated area via a resonance in the form of a colour, a symbol or an image derived from fractal geometry. The distance between the model and the treated area is irrelevant. Clear and quantifiable changes are observed in the treated area. In principle, the size of the area being treated is of no significance, provided it is regarded as a whole, i.e. as a system.
The basic method was discovered at Stanford University in the USA at the beginning of the century and was initially developed for use in human medicine. In the forties and fifties engineers in Britain and America pioneered the use of this technique to improve the quality of crops and increase crop yields.
As a result of her extensive experience of healing processes based on energy flows, in 1986 Irene Lutz recognised the potential of using this method to treat low-vitality woods and agricultural land.
Following successful preliminary trials in conjunction with De la Warr Laboratories, Oxford, in 1987/88 independent institutes and experts confirmed the convincing results of the first forest trials. The ecosystem responded to the treatment with an increase in vitality on many levels, for example:
Even wildlife seemed to sense what was going on and sought food and resting places in the area being treated.
In the face of increasing environmental damage, resonance therapy thus supports nature's self-regulatory capabilities by releasing forces that had previously been blocked.
© 08.2003 Radionik Verlag