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Hypothesis of the biofield control system

Townsend Letter for Doctors and Patients, April, 2007 by Savely Savva

In the 1970s, when I worked as mechanical engineer in Leningrad, USSR and had written my PhD dissertation in the field of physical chemistry, I was introduced to what was called "psychic healing." I saw a movie about Pilipino "psychic surgeons" that was privately shown at the Academic Institute of Neurophysiology. I didn't think about how it might have been faked. I thought "What if this is true?" After all, science progresses through paradoxical observations.

Thus, when in 1985 in Dallas, Texas, I had an opportunity to join a group of 50 Americans traveling to Mazatlan, Mexico, to be treated by a Pilipino psychic healer, Romy Bugarin, I jumped on the wagon. I certainly did not know the medical problems of the group members, but they included people with different kinds of cancer and one man with a deformed nasal septum (the partition) whom I met later and whose problem Romy fixed by "finger surgery."

Romy didn't ask patients about their problems or complaints. At the first encounter, an individual lay on a bench while two assistants held a white bed sheet behind him or her. Romy looked at the individual from a distance of six to eight feet for less than a minute. This was the diagnostic procedure. Then, during the healing sessions--each member of the group was treated twice a day for a duration of five days--he worked on a particular part of the body. Usually, he indented the body with his fingers, and the indentation immediately became filled with a pink liquid. With his other hand, he pulled from the indentation three types of objects: cream-colored solid strings with irregular edges two-three inches long; jelly-like blood clots; and films rolled up into strings. He didn't demonstrate them to patients, especially when he worked on their backs; he put them on a plate held by an assistant. I had a feeling that these things came not from the bodies but somehow materialized in his hands.

My personal experience and the outcome of the treatment were remarkable, although I don't know the full extent of what he addressed. Working on my bladder, Romy said that there was a white mass there coming from the right kidney but that it was not dangerous. Beginning twenty five years before, I had periodical renal colic every two years. Horrible pain. Every time, I ended in a hospital. X-rays didn't show any stones in kidneys or ureters and, in a few days, after morphine injection, I could forget about the condition. In 1987, in Monterey, California, a local urologist finally performed a cystoscopy and found a golf ball-size cancerous tumor that apparently periodically interfered with the ureter outlet. Histological analysis showed a class-two cancer that was removed, but has emerged again and, since that time, has been removed three times showing unchanged histology.

For at least 15 years before 1985, I had a lower back pain that chained me to the bed for two to three weeks twice a year. I didn't have any back pain in Mazatlan, and I didn't tell Romy about the problem. Romy worked on four points on my back for a total of less than three minutes, and during the following 21 years (i.e., up to today), I have had no shade of my former back pain.

In 1983, I had had a mild heart attack. My father, an otherwise healthy and strong man, died from a heart attack at the age of 64. In 1985, I barely could carry a rather light suitcase, and a local Dallas cardiologist insisted on a bypass surgery. Romy worked on my heart for three to five minutes without "pulling out" any substance. Upon retuning back home, in Dallas, I didn't feel any improvement. I considered going for the open-heart surgery, but in about two to three months, all symptoms were gone. Suffice it to say that I didn't see any cardiologist during the next six years--until 1991. Later, I went through angioplasty and had four bypasses installed, etc. My guess is that I wouldn't have needed these if I had access to Romy again.

Now, the most interesting question is, "What kind of physical interaction is at work that changes the program of death, as in my case, in duration of two to three months?" It is clearly not electric (chemical), electromagnetic (this will be shown later), gravitational, or nuclear--the only interactions known to today's physics.

This question is the subject of the book that I had been editing for a year and a half: LIFE and MIND--In Search of the Physical Basis (Trafford Publishing). The book is a collection of 12 articles by scientists from four countries and is structured in three parts:

1. The concept of the biofield control system of the organism

2. Paradoxical scientific observations that indicate inadequacy of contemporary physics to explain life and mind and suggest ways for further studies

3. Alternative physical models of the Universe that may incorporate life suggested by five physicists

The articles are written by scientists and for scientists in appropriate areas of science--biology, biochemistry, biophysics, and physics--but the concept of the biofield control system is comprehensible to any thoughtful individual. The following sections include parts of my introductory article elucidating this subject.

 

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