Do healing crystals really work.?!


Question: I was given some from my very thoughtfull best freind for xmas as iv been ill recently.Can they work.As any1 experienced this working.


Answers: I was given some from my very thoughtfull best freind for xmas as iv been ill recently.Can they work.As any1 experienced this working.

In my opinion they do, but not very much is known about the subject, as a result most people who practice truthfully do not know what they are doing.

(I do a lot of energy work) My observation is that crystals tend to magnify or change energy fields around them (they may also generate their own but I don't believe that's the case).
If you go in an area where you expose yourself to them, it can affect and change your field. For instance, the best dwelling I've ever lived in was completely granite (which has lots of little crystals in it), and I noticed a huge difference in how I felt.
By the same token, I know someone who was acrystal dealer in africa who said sleeping over a bed of them in his truck was about the nicest thing he'd ever had. I also have a friend who used it to get rid of his nightmares (amethyst around his bed).

However, the big problem with using crystals is pretty simple. They affect energy fields, but it's very difficult to determine exactly how. As a result, if you use a lot of them they can knock stuff out of balance, and tiny variations between two usages can create completely different effects.
Since this field has not been studied in depth by anyone to figure out exactly what the things do, and how each factor (ie. size, distance from target) affects their results, it's very hard to get consistent results or be certain bad ones won't arise.
The knowledge of crystal therapy (from people who use it) at this point is these crystals tend to do _____ when you put them around ___.
So, to answer your question it's really a yes and no.
They definitely do something, but guiding that something to an intended result is much less likely.

A little bit, from the placebo effect.

no

Yes, crystals can work. Please make sure that you are using the right healing crystal for your illness though. Do an internet on healing crystals and placement. A good website will also give your information on placement and timelines for using them.

You should clear and cleanse your crystals before doing any healing work, as well as periodic cleaning to maintain their positive energy.

Information can be found here:
http://www.crystalhealingcenter.com/site...

They are a nice, thoughtful gift. They work by increasing the bank accounts of people who sell rocks. But, crystals are pretty, so if you feel better by touching pretty rocks, then in your mind, they work!

crystals are interesting quarts especially if you put energy in to a quarts it will change shape if you change the shape you get energy out. that's how quarts watches and liquid crystal displays (LCD) work.
so there is energy in crystals

People will say the placebo effect, but I disagree. I base this on the fact that I recently was at my wit's end because my one year old was waking up between 4 and 8 times a night, every night and nothing was working. After months and months someone suggested a crystal gridline (I think that was what it was called), so I got the crystals needed, cleaned them as I was told to and set them up in her bedroom. It was amazing, she instantly started sleeping better, now most nights I get her to sleep 12 hours. Love crystals, they are fabulous. I think she is much too little for any placebo effect to come into it, she didn't even see me put them there.

Honestly i asked the same question on this site and a guy told m he belives they work . If you go to my qyestion Why Did They Fallow Her? you might say they work . So the answer to your question is Yes i think they work

Always consult a qualified physician to treat illness. If physicians fail to cure or treat your illness, then you can broaden your treatment search elsewhere like alternative medicine treatments.

A scientist would not discount any claims without first experimenting to determine if claims were accurate. I would try it if free or relatively low cost, shown not to be harmful and the instructions were clearly written so that I could follow them.

But, you can't put all your eggs in one basket either by using exclusively crystal therapy to treat disease.

Some scientists have grown to trust medical / science journals for answers to these kind of questions for them instead of doing their own experimentation, but I have found that such published scientific studies are very expensive, must be conducted by well-qualified persons, and are apt to be highly influenced by who is funding the studies as to the direction preferred for the study results.

For example, one compound, laetrile / amygdalin if studied by a pharmaceutical industry corporation shall be found to be ineffective and toxic / poison (England, USA, Canada, etc), but if studied by places that are not unduly influenced by big pharmaceutical industry corporations like in South Korea, the outcome is the opposite: highly effective against disease, promising, and non-toxic.

Visit: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/
Search for the following search terms:
laetrile amygdalin "South Korea"

You should get 3 search results from "South Korea" that all have positive results. If you leave out "South Korea" and permit the other studies to show up, vitually all of the rest of these will have negative results if the funding for the study was done using pharmaceutical industry funding. Does this tell you anything? Does your doctor know about this? Can anyone trust this information source ever again?

The way that this contradictory evidence is concocted by the pharmaceutical companies is to structure the experiment to fail by arranging this to happen. There are many ways to do this. One is to use other compounds with the laetrile / amygdalin that would prematurely release the cytotoxic (cellular toxic) components of laetrile / amygdalin to poison the patient / experimental animal rather than have the cancer cells locally and gradually / naturally trigger / release them via enzymes characteristic to just cancer cells. Another way is to use too little of the compound or way too much of it. Another way is to compile the results, and summarize it inaccurately. Another way is to falsify or alter results provided to them by the individual researchers who provide the lead investigators with the basic data.

The base compound of laetrile / amygdalin cannot be patented--just grasses, seeds, free-range meats, etc. As such the pharmaceutical companies want to dissuade anyone from making use of these things in diet.

http://video.google.ca/videosearch?q=%22...

http://video.google.ca/videosearch?q=G.+...

http://video.google.ca/videosearch?q=Ger...
The power-hour "video" is actually just a radio show recording with a static bit of text on the screen for the whole thing. The actual discussion of Gerson therapy starts at about the 1h:07m mark in the recording. There are a lot of commercials for alt-med cures that you may safely ignore if you want.
The "Dying to Have Known" video is very good. The tour of the center one is O.K. The Chapter 3 titled video is excellent!

http://video.google.ca/videosearch?q=Ozo...

http://video.google.ca/videosearch?q=Hox...

http://video.google.ca/videosearch?q=%22...

http://video.google.ca/videosearch?q=%22...

http://www.worldwithoutcancer.org.uk/nit...

http://www.smart-drugs.net/ias-laetrile-...

Some of the health claims made in the series of Gerson therapy videos are amazing and probably true. I insist that you view the one with Chapter 3 in its title.





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