What Is Voice Bio-Analysis as Used by Gary
Sinclair?
We are in the midst of a paradigm shift in the health field. Voice BioAnalysis
is a "complimentary" modality with roots in the ancient past and a future
potential that is important in this shift. As sound is the creative force
of the universe, every molecule of every substance on our planet Earth radiates
a specific frequency of energy depending on its association with other molecules
and its absorption of light energy. As humans, these frequencies are involved
in the energy "flow" (chi, prana, life force) in the physical body as well
as the emotional body. When they are out of balance,
the system or organ which vibrates at that particular frequency dysfunctions,
creating dis ease.
In the beginning, God spoke the world into being. Since time immemorial,
we've used music to calm the soul, sooth the nerves, and put our babies
to sleep. Hospitals are seeing that the therapeutic use of sound has recuperative
power as well, affecting heart rate, blood pressure, our nervous systems,
and more. Modern medicine has identified that the very same pathways that
are used to realize (feel) pain, are the very same ones that we use to feel
pleasure. Sending in pleasure via sound and music or other vibrational therapies
is the ultimate distraction from the pain. (In seminar teaching Gary shifts
the energy with the emotional reference points.)
Technological advances allow us to look into this vast variety of frequencies
that make up the voice. Just as an acupuncturist can 'read' the pulse, Voice
BioAnalysis 'reads' the voice as a blueprint of the current energetics of
the body as a whole. Voice BioAnalysis can be likened to taking an X ray
of the entire body, physically and emotionally. It will pinpoint the core
problem in
less than 5 minutes. This complete body reading will show energy imbalances
as emotional problems, potential and current physical stress or disorders,
body functions, organs, nutritional deficiencies, potential contaminants,
and more. Results do not depend on the orientation, skills, or evaluation
of the practitioner.
What makes sound therapy different from music therapy? Aren't they the
same?
No. Sound therapy is "content" oriented, where music therapy is "process"
oriented. What this means is that sound therapy provides a way to measure
energy specifically in the body based on computerized assessments, in much
the same way we measure brain wave activity or heart wave activity with
EKGs or other electrical monitoring equipment. The voice print is a blueprint
of
the current energetics of the body as a WHOLE. In sound therapy, via the
computerized Voice BioAnalysis, anyone can determine the presenting energetics
of the individual. The computerized analysis is not subjective and quantifiable.
The energy is simply codified by the practitioner, via the
computer, and the results are shared in private with the individual.
Music therapy, by definition, is the prescribed use of music by a qualified
person to effect positive changes in the psychological, physical, cognitive,
or social functioning of individuals with health or educational problems.
Music therapists enjoy university training, certification through regulatory
bodies which measure the effectiveness of therapists work. Music therapy
evolved through the use of music in hospitals with patients recovering from
war injuries, and later developed into institutional programs that serve
emotionally, mentally, and physically challenged populations. The main difference
between music therapy and sound therapy (also referred to as Sound Healing),
other than anyone can enjoy access to sound therapy without the restraints
of regulation, is that sound therapy can identify exactly what tones are
missing or "stressed". After the assessment,
appropriate suggestions to harmonize or bring the body into homeostasis
are made available. While sound therapy may provide some aspects of music
therapy, sound therapy is a more content oriented approach. This means that
through identifying the frequencies present in the voice, measured in terms
of hertz, toxins can be identified, and energetic stressed or weakened body
systems can be singled out for special attention energetically.
Why are Health Care Practitioners using Voice Bio-Analysis?
Understanding the holographic and morphogenic fields that exist in the body,
give the health care practitioner a better understanding of the correct
nutrition or natural product(s) that will help support the body. Additionally,
once the missing frequencies in the body are identified by
exact frequency or tone, we can supplement via a tone box, or use other
vibration therapies with compatible frequencies, that entrain the brain
waves. (Brain wave entrainment is simply teaching the brain the missing
frequency.)
Why do we use the voice as a way to evaluate frequency?
In Voice BioAnalysis, we treat the voice as an accurate map, or holograph
of the energies in the body, much like the hands or feet, in reflexology
or the pulse in acupuncture. Comparative studies, such as live blood cell
analysis, and other diagnostic tools have only served to confirm this accuracy.
You yourself, when taking the test, know that you know, it is a creative
blueprint of where you are.
What happens during the analysis?
Initially, the client gives 3 voice samples to the technician who then records
them on a computer or Voice Analysis equipment. Using the voice samples,
the computer graphs the tones only, not the verbal content of the samples.
The technician utilizes the computer generated report to discuss
what frequencies are present and missing as well as possible energetic remedies
with nutritional and herbal supplementation, lifestyle and food suggestions.
Total process normally takes about 30 minutes.
The Business Times –– March 29, 2001
A Voice Test to Find What Ails You –– Kathryn Thompson
An American Naturopath who developed Voice BioAnalysis talks to Jaime Ee.
'Based on your voice, we can tell if a person is going to become a heart
attack victim or if he or she will develop diabetes later in life if they
don't correct their lifestyle now. And I don't need to know anything about
the client before hand." Kathryn Thompson, Naturopath
When it comes to medical examinations, which sounds better to you? Being
naked in an ugly gown having strange technicians prod you in places that
don't normally see the light of day? Or speaking into a microphone fully
clothed and having Kathryn Thompson tell you within minutes not only what's
wrong with you but what can afflict you later if you don't take the right
health precautions?
Neither science fiction nor late night infomercial, Ms. Thompson is an American
naturopath who developed Voice BioAnalysis technology seven years ago as
a diagnostic tool that breaks down a person's voice into a set of frequencies
which correlate to his or her physical and emotional make up.
Following a basic principle that is similar to the acupuncture concept of
chi in which the energy or life force of a person needs to be in balance
for the body to function normally, and that imbalances are what cause disease
and illness Voice BioAnalysis measures the "frequency" of each organ and
detects irregularities in that frequency, which in turn means that the organ
is not functioning properly and hence, illness results.
"Based upon your voice, we can see problems while they are developing before
they even become symptomatic," says Ms. Thompson.
"We can tell if a person is going to become a heart attack victim or if
he or she will develop diabetes later in life if they don't correct their
lifestyle now. And I don't need to know anything about the client before
hand. They come in, I take a sampling of their voice and in five minutes,
I can tell
them what kind of symptoms they are experiencing".
Naturally, skepticism is not new to the soft spoken Ms. Thompson, who tells
of one client whom she advised to see a cardiologist immediately because
his voice analysis showed that he was on the verge of a heart attack. "I
didn't want to take the time that was needed for nutritional therapy so
I recommended that he go to a cardiologist for chelation therapy which is
intravenous and fast".
Of course, when her client went to the cardiologist and told him what Ms.
Thompson had said: "He laughed and said, 'yeah, right. I'm not going to
do anything until I do my own tests'. So he did, which took five days and
when my client went back, the cardiologist told him 'OK, you're ready to
have a heart attack, let's start you on chelation therapy immediately'."
Not surprisingly, Ms. Thompson developed Voice BioAnalysis out of her own
skepticism, not just of conventional medicine, but also with the kind of
sound therapy that was practiced in the US.
"I had taken some courses from people who taught sound therapy which is
basically healing with sound. But it was very scattered; there was no technical
basis I could rely on. For example, if someone came to me with Multiple
Sclerosis and had a certain voiceprint, then logically, the next
person who comes to me with Multiple Sclerosis should have the same voiceprint.
But it wasn't so with the other therapies. They couldn't diagnose from a
voiceprint. They couldn't say, your thyroid is low or you have an adrenal
imbalance; what they did was ask the client what their symptoms were
and they would do different sound formulae to repair it."
"I found that backward. I felt that we should be able to take a sampling
of a person's voice and, through that energy, be able to tell them the symptoms
they had".
Convinced of the power of sound but also burdened by the fact that the sound
therapy she had applied to one of her best friends had made his illness
even worse. Ms. Thompson went to bed one night and "basically prayed and
said, God, if I'm supposed to be doing this, you better show me and show
me really fast because I'm going to quit next week!".
In what she can only explain as a series of dreams over the next four months,
she worked with a computer engineer and medical clinics and doctors to work
out a program that uses a voice "imprint" to chart a person's well being.
"It's not that unusual," says Ms. Thompson, who takes the basic principles
of voice analysis from the teachings of Harold Burr, a Yale professor in
the 1920s to 1950s who discovered that living things are controlled by electro
dynamic fields which essentially formed a blueprint of life. These could
therefore be measured to reveal physical and mental conditions and used
to diagnose illness before symptoms develop.
"A doctor has to rely on his tests to really figure out what's wrong with
you. Unfortunately, many of your symptoms could be crossover symptoms, i.e.,
you've got the same list of symptoms but they could be for five different
diseases. You could tell him your symptoms and he might give you a medication
for it, and you may not feel better and you go back to him and he gives
you something else. In the meantime, you're on medication that is not normal.
It may even be the wrong medication, meaning your disease is progressing
because of the misdiagnosis. But we don't have to guess. We take the voiceprint
and it shows us exactly what the core problem is. You may have different
types of symptoms but really there's only one thing wrong and if you fix
that one thing, everything else will fall into place."
Prevention is better?..
Today, while Voice BioAnalysis is still a relatively young field, it is
practiced by some 300 US natural health practitioners. Ms. Thompson has
also drawn interest outside the US in Canada, the UK, Australia, Belgium
and throughout Asia including Singapore. In South Korea, she is now involved
with local doctors to petition the government to adopt Voice BioAnalysis
as a medical screening tool.
She is trying to do the same thing in the US, where doctors are keen to
use her technique, but are not encouraged to because of rigid health insurance
companies. "We have doctors who want to use this. I have people who want
to put this into medical clinics to use as a screening device so we can
help these patients. But the insurance companies aren't open to preventative
care". Additionally, if it isn't the accepted protocol, the doctor may lose
his malpractice insurance.
Indeed, preventative care is a core issue that is close to Ms. Thompson's
heart. She first turned to naturopathy in her late 20s after the birth of
her daughter when her doctor was unable to diagnose a pain in her uterus.
She suffered for the next two years before another surgeon discovered a
growing tumor that had to be removed immediately. The resulting surgery
left her devastated and unable to bear any more children, which she so badly
wanted.
Seeking more natural means of health care, she became a qualified naturopath
and hypnotherapist before developing Voice BioAnalysis. And because voice
analysis only pinpoints the problem and doesn't cure it, there is still
need for therapy like nutrition, acupuncture, and if necessary, medication.
And here she feels there is enormous room for working hand in hand with
the medical profession.
But what, in the end, does she get out of this?
""My goal is to keep people healthy. To make them aware of what's happening
in their bodies so they can make the nutrition or lifestyle changes before
illness strikes." -- Kathryn (Kae) Thompson, Naturopath, MHt. --
www.VoiceBio.com
To register for CERTIFICATION TRAINING CLASSES in USA and Canada, or to
arrange a PERSONAL VOICE PRINT, contact Gary Sinclair at
CELBR8LIFE@AOL.COM
Celebrate Life 760-451-3099 --
www.CyberPhysiology.com
To request Gary Sinclair as a speaker,
please submit our
contact
form.
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