If you were a radio station what frequency would you be vibing at right now?

Smooth jazz?

Rock?

Country?

Electronic dance?

Reggae?

Did you know that most of Bob Marley’s reggae music was written in 528 hertz?

That’s the frequency of love.

Plus it’s the frequency of the gold tuning forks I use in my office on acupuncture points. 

Cymatics, the study of sound and vibration, has long fascinated me after watching sand and water dance and form different patterns in a demonstration put on by musical monks.

Curious? Search Cymatics Science Vs. Music – Nigel Stanford on YouTube and you’ll see a ton of really neat patterns made by different frequencies.

The water in your body and cells responds to vibration much like the patterns you see in a Cymatics demo.

You are an antenna as much as a receiver of vibration.

This week on my podcast I interview Mike Hammond on his pain patches called Signal Relief, or as he calls them “antennas for pain.”

When you’re in pain, your body gives off a signal on repeat to your brain that it’s not safe, you’re in danger.

The message back keeps alerting you to the pain like a big red flashing warning sign.

It’s great when it’s an injury that just happened, but when it’s chronic, there’s no danger it’s just annoying.

How do you interrupt this signal?

Distract the body with something to interrupt the vibration and signal.

Acupuncture is a prime example of this, as is massage, acupressure, and even tuning forks.

Your body has to stop and think…wait, I’m receiving a new message, what is this?

That pattern interrupt is what can help with pain relief as it cuts off the looping signal you’ve become accustomed to running.

The same thing goes with negative thoughts that keep you in a negative vibe state.

According to Mike, the Signal Relief patch is effective 85% of the time.

I’m testing that out right now on my patient population, myself and on my Dad to see if his aches and pains reduce.

How does the Signal Relief patch work?

It contains embedded minerals that work as an antenna to draw the body’s attention to it and disperse pain signals through the patch.

The areas of your body that are hurting are sending out pain signals because they are damaged, which means there’s poor communication between the cells in that area and decreased circulation because of it.

Signal Relief works to shift the electrical signals from ones of alarm to ones of calm between cells that trigger swelling and pain.

This change impacts local nerve fibers to reduce the electrical messages that signal the pain sensation.

The patch itself doesn’t contain any medication or pain reliever.

You place it on your skin and see if it helps interrupt your pain signals, and it’s good for a year.

Mike and I dive deep into it on the podcast, and he causes me to tear up big time with his stories of veterans using his patches.

It’s fascinating to think that something so simple can do such an amazing job of relieving pain.

I like that it’s a tool that can be used in between acupuncture sessions. 

I’m finding teaching my patients how to use tuning forks to extend their acupuncture session benefits is helping folks feel better for longer.

It seems with all the 5G and electrical noise in the universe these days it’s easier to become neurologically fried. 

To keep up with all your exposures, it’s worth having some tools to utilize to help you extend the benefits between acupuncture sessions. 

If you’re curious about Signal Relief and how it’s being used check out episode 611 anywhere you get your podcasts.

Here’s to working on good vibes,

Dr. J

Jannine Krause

Get back to your wild, active, vibrant self

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