Here is something which has helped Sue very recently to an extent which
surprised us both. After she had been ES for 3 months she also became sensitive to bright sunlight, especially low winter sun or near sunset. She was tested recently by a guy called Ian Jordan who is trying to measure people's sensitivities to particular light frequencies and colours. He concluded that she was particularly sensitive in the yellow end of the spectrum (which is consistent with her worst problems being when the sun is yellowish) and produced a pair of glasses which were tinted with a particular blue colour designed to be in antiphase with her "problem" frequencies. We received the glasses a couple of weeks ago and Sue tried them on and reported an immediate and very positive effect. Her eyes felt soothed immediately, to a far greater extent than when she wears normal sunglasses. Also after a short time she felt that her whole nervous system felt soothed. It was rather like her experience when she gets away from a strong EM field which has been affecting her and into a low-EMF area like woodland or lakes. It was a big surprise to us both, as we had been unsure whether it would have any effect at all and had expected that it would be minor, if any. It seems that, just as ES people are bombarded with EMF fields which fire all the neurons continuously, give no rest and wear your system down, the same is true if one has become sensitive to certain light frequencies - again one's neurons are being constantly bombarded through the eyes, and these glasses seem to alleviate that effect and ease the burden on your whole system. Ian Jordan is based in Cambridge UK - I don't know if there are people doing similar work in other countries. Ian [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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> and produced a pair of glasses which were tinted with a
> particular blue colour I believe this is called "Color Therapy": http://www.momentum98.com/colorther.html Marc |
Yes, definite similarities. However the difference with the "color therapy"
approach seems to be that one alternates between a range of different coloured glasses to suit how you feel. The approach Ian Jordan took was to actually conduct diagnostic tests and produce a unique prescription for Sue - like an optician working out a spectacle lenses prescription, but with colour frequencies. (He is in fact a qualified optician by background). Ian _____ From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Marc Martin Sent: 03 October 2006 22:54 To: [hidden email] Subject: RE: [eSens] Light sensitivity and tinted glasses > and produced a pair of glasses which were tinted with a > particular blue colour I believe this is called "Color Therapy": http://www.momentum <http://www.momentum98.com/colorther.html> 98.com/colorther.html Marc [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Marc Martin
Marc, there's also the Irlen Syndrome site (which I linked to my site -
though my URL may be outdated for all I know - i don't keep track of links much. Ian: It's intriguing re: color. As mentioned on my site, I had come to the conclusion that LIGHT (no matter which color) is an antagonist - based on my negative experiences with: near infra-RED, as well as LCDs, as well as LEDs. And also nurses negative experiences in the vicinity of BLUE light near jaundiced preemies. I finally said, what the heck, ALL colors of LIGHT RADIATION can kill - if too intense. BY WAY OF ANALOGY: It's the same idea as extreme (vs. mild) acid stimulants or extreme (vs. mild) alkaline stimulants, or extreme (vs. mild) mint, or extreme (vs. mild pepper) and so forth! Minni --- In [hidden email], "Marc Martin" <marc@...> wrote: > > > and produced a pair of glasses which were tinted with a > > particular blue colour > > I believe this is called "Color Therapy": > > http://www.momentum98.com/colorther.html > > Marc >
Electrostatically Yours,
Minni, Lysine4flu blog |
In reply to this post by Marc Martin
That is great they helped. I was going to say the same thing, color
therapy, and it makes perfect sense it would help. Blue being a cooling, soothing color. I've had good luck using color therapy for different things, but hadn't come across the glasses yet. I would suspect over time, as Sue does better, her need for a different color will change also. ~ Snoshoe --- In [hidden email], "Marc Martin" <marc@...> wrote: > > > and produced a pair of glasses which were tinted with a > > particular blue colour > > I believe this is called "Color Therapy": > > http://www.momentum98.com/colorther.html > > Marc > |
Fair enough, but I think there's more to it that that. It is not just any
blue, it is a particular tint which screens out the specific yellow frequencies which were affecting Sue. However I guess that, as you say, her requirements may well change in time if she gets "desensitised" to some of these frequencies. Ian _____ From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of snoshoe_2 Sent: 05 October 2006 01:02 To: [hidden email] Subject: [eSens] Re: Light sensitivity and tinted glasses That is great they helped. I was going to say the same thing, color therapy, and it makes perfect sense it would help. Blue being a cooling, soothing color. I've had good luck using color therapy for different things, but hadn't come across the glasses yet. I would suspect over time, as Sue does better, her need for a different color will change also. ~ Snoshoe --- In eSens@yahoogroups. <mailto:eSens%40yahoogroups.com> com, "Marc Martin" <marc@...> wrote: > > > and produced a pair of glasses which were tinted with a > > particular blue colour > > I believe this is called "Color Therapy": > > http://www.momentum <http://www.momentum98.com/colorther.html> 98.com/colorther.html > > Marc > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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