HEALTH
This book is valuable as an
intelligent overview of many
different approaches to
energy and sound medicine,
as well as an instructive
anatomy of the development
of the new therapeutic
modality.
as she was able to connect the dots and put the
pieces into a broader context. What emerges is a
plausible, and detailed mapping of the human
energetic anatomy, or biofield. What gives it substance are the empirical results that Eileen and
her growing army of students achieve in a regular
and reproducible fashion using her map and tech-
niques. During the course of 20 years of practice in
this field she has amassed a considerable body of
evidence and it is exciting to consider the implications of this emerging avenue of energy medicine.
The ability to identify, treat and release blockages,
and thus pain and disease, simply by applying vibration in the form of a tuning fork, is indeed mind
boggling.
While this bo ok is written primarily for therapists,
I believe that it can be used for self-help with ease.
Eileen is very open and forthcoming about the
tools that she has discovered to be most effective,
and has been simplifying them refining them over
the years. They are available through her website,
or one could order them directly from the manufacturer. All of the information is freely provided.
This book is valuable as an intelligent overview of
many different approaches to energy and sound
medicine, as well as an instructive anatomy of the
development of the new therapeutic modality.
Warmly recommended.
Reviewed by Miriam Knight
Eileen Day McKusick is a researcher, writer, educator and practitioner who has been studying the
effects of audible sound on the human body since
1996. She is the originator of Biofield Tuning , a
unique therapeutic method utilizing tuning forks.
Eileen is the founder of The Biofield Tuning Institute in Burlington, VT, and is the author of Tuning
the Human Biofield – Healing with Vibrational
Sound Therapy. Her website is https://biofieldtuning.com
LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW
40 | NEW CONSCIOUSNESS REVIEW