This section is from the book "Born To Be Magnetic. Volumes 1 & 2", by Frances Nixon. Also available from Amazon: Born To Be Magnetic.
It came as a tremendous shock to me when I first discovered that X-rays permanently change the atomic alignment and magnetic moment in the bones - in those bones that are directly subjected to the strongly polarizing, short electromagnetic waves of X-rays. This realization jolted me considerably, as it did many others like myself, who have long accepted X-ray as a diagnostic tool of our modern times. We have been lulled into a feeling of false security by the fact that most of our doctors sanction and use X-rays freely. "They must be harmless", we concluded.
We read articles entitled "The Wonderful World of X-rays", and consequently we are lulled further into a state of apathy with the attitude that X-rays have a special intrigue.
"Forgive them for they know not what they do." This well-known phrase is only partially applicable, for shortly after X-rays were first discovered in 1896, their hazards and damage to the living cells became publicized. Evidence and statistics ever since have repeatedly stressed the dangers, but some forgiveness can be justified on the following score. How can we realize what we are destroying or disrupting, if we are not even aware of its existence? The dedicated purpose of this book is to make every reader thoroughly aware - aware first that our magnetic pattern exists, and secondly that it is possibly the most vital part of our entire being. Finally anything that is a permanent threat to its continuity should be regarded with deep concern.
By observing the atomic disruption to a circuit, initiated by the movements of X-rayed bones, we have gained a great deal of valuable evidence, that corroborated the seriousness of tampering with this fundamental law of our biology. We will shortly use more sample cases and the reader himself can draw his own conclusions and do his own assessing.
I was rather stupidly slow in associating a great many of the deviations encountered in the early years of our research with X-rays. However, truth will out, and waves speak a very honest language of their own.
Ronnie Hymers, for years one of my reliable wave-transmitters, was hit by a car. The injury was negligible, but his back was X-rayed as a result. Afterwards the wires in his hands were lifeless and at first I did not associate this fact with the X-rays. Shortly after this, Wendy McAstocker, another faithful wave-transmitter, fell and broke her shoulder and I lost another wave-transmitter. Now the wires held in her hands had become lifeless, too. It wasn't surprising that at about this time I began to suspect X-rays. Was this also the reason that a majority group could not record waves with angle wires? I speculated further, could X-rays be causing a cancellation of waves in people?
My whole attention became focused on these possibilities and all other aspects of X-rays in the human body. In our research many major points came to light. X-rayed bones lose their original quanta and become realigned with a new Vivaxis and circuit, a circuit connecting the energies in the bone to the point where the X-ray was executed. The radiations and energy circuits in X-rayed bones are stronger than those of normal bones. Time generally does little to erase these foreign radiations.
The foreign wave circuit is only detected when the X-rayed bone is flexed or the energies in it stimulated through pressure on the bone. During this time the deviations in wave impulses can be detected throughout the various parts of the body. As an example, suppose there is an X-ray in a bone of the right arm. The pattern of the wave impulses can be recorded directly from a neuron associated with that X-rayed right arm - a neuron located in the cortex of the head on the left hemisphere along the plane of precentral gyrus. When the X-rayed arm is moved the wire revolves for a short period and as the arm continues to move, the energies sort out and link up into two circuits, both with different wave channels and Vivaxes - one belonging to the quanta introduced into the bone at the site of the X-ray machine, and the other his own. This is indicated by tracing the direction of the waves' vectors. The energies co-exist but the efficiency of the circuit has been decreased and consequently the growth pattern of the cells is affected. We are suspicious that this is where time occasionally tells an ugly story of tumors and cancer growths.
By comparison, when a normal arm without any X-rays is in motion, it sends off electromagnetic wave impulses with a standard, well-defined pattern - a pattern alternating in opposite directions and in its own wave channel. The angle wire will continue to swing sharply back and forth until such time as the motion of the arm ceases, which is in sharp contrast to the circulating motion detected from flexed X-rayed bones.
The heart impulses are affected by X-rays. When wave impulses are picked up directly from the heart, the normal pattern is exactly the same as when a limb is in motion. The motion is continuous, alternating in one wave channel to the person's Vivaxis. If, however, another wave is introduced from a foreign circuit, the angle wire registers this in the characteristic manner by deviating from the alternating pattern to a circulating motion and then sorting. The foreign circuit can also be introduced by thought wave of another person or by physical contact with another circuit. These are adjustments in the daily routine of the heart, but what a heart should not have to tolerate is a multitude of foreign circuits introduced by a massive amount of conflicting fields of X-rays - teeth, chest, arms, legs, abdomen, neck and head, etc. Each X-rayed bone, when it is flexed, upsets the normal continuity of pattern and can be detected. However, when more than one X-ray is flexed at the same time, the pattern illustrates accelerated confusion and what eventually builds up to a state of undesirable static electricity. Scientists are now claiming many fatal heart attacks are a case of the heart electrocuting itself.
The wave interference from X-rayed bones was detected only when a bone was flexed. This characteristic eventually gave me the clue how to erase the effects of X-rays, but not before I had suffered through many months of mounting frustration. Frustration coupled with indignation, for the method we had been using to channel did not erase the foreign radiations in the bone, that we now realize were directly associated with X-rays.
I was indignant because I felt at the time that X-rays were a permanent disrupting force whose cumulative damage would be felt during our entire life span, always acting as a threat to the continuity of our magnetic circuit. I was personally indignant not only because of the restrictions my X-rayed foot put on my activities, but also because of the cumulative trouble my husband was encountering.
 
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