We are often our own best guinea pigs for ferreting out facts, and for this reason I will first relate my own X-ray story.

In our books, X-rays had become a very dirty word, although fortunately, I personally only had X-rays in the teeth and my left foot. It was the one in my foot that gave me a great deal of trouble. Ten years previously, a dislocated toe necessitated an X-ray. During the succeeding years, my foot would swell and ache at the slightest provocation. We had just moved to an island and we were breaking in new ground on steep terrain. By nightfall the stress on the X-rayed foot caused perpetual trouble. The doctor diagnosed it as arthritis or gout. The more I flexed it the more it would swell and ache. It was a continual cross to bear and I could ill afford the time necessary to rest it. On one occasion I had hiked five miles up a mountain road and on the way down was jogging on the balls of the feet, unaware still of the confliction of circuits caused by the X-rayed bones. Twice my leg went paralyzed to the point where I couldn't bend my knee or move my leg. By this time I had learned the strategy of channelling, otherwise I doubt if I could have made it down on my own.

My activities became restricted as a result of this X-ray infliction. Our Hammond organ was one of my greatest pleasures, but I was unable to work the pedal keyboard with my left foot. The stress on the bones soon made my whole leg seize up or swell.

The limitations imposed on myself were small as compared to the havoc I realized X-rays were creating in the system of Dick, my husband. This havoc was cumulative, many of the X-rays dating back over thirty years to the days when he played rugby. Injuries with resulting X-rays were all part of the rugged game, but what he hadn't anticipated was the gradual year by year accumulating complications brought about through circuit disruptions. One complication in particular we will give comprehensive coverage, as we have already intimated that tumors can often be by-products of X-rays.

My husband, a practicing forestry engineer, had arrived back from a strenuous summer's job of timber cruising and locating logging roads. It was active type of work and X-rays of his ankle, back, shoulders, neck, chest, teeth, and wrist were possibly all being flexed continually. One pictures the losing battle nature had, struggling against all those foreign circuits - circuits out of control and cell growths running wild, their normal magnetic blueprint shorted or destroyed.

It was a discouraged man who showed me the large growth at the joint on the head of the femur leg bone. The growth was approximately the size of a large egg and was increasing in size steadily. It pained him considerably, especially at night. There was pain felt in the groin and down the leg. Effects of X-rays had also been taking their toll for many years in miseries felt in his shoulder, back and neck, but like so many others, he had grown to accept and live with these discomforts. After all, backaches had become the order of the day. Common was the greeting, "How is your backache?" Equally common were X-rays to the chest, which penetrated part of the spine. I well remember Dick's despairing comment, "I'm not going to be able to continue with my work in the woods. Channelling appears to relieve and help my leg temporarily, but as soon as I start any strenuous climbing, the whole leg commences to seize up."

My despair matched his, for I realized that X-rays were the underlying cause, and I honestly didn't think it within the realm of possibility that we could ever erase them.

I suspect I must have relaxed considerably before I awoke around four o'clock one morning. The answer was there like a clearly written message, tranquil and peaceful. It was so simple and reasonable! I later speculated that for a period, the frustrated state of my mind must have been caused by a mental block.

Prior to detailing the application of my inspiration, we will first give a little more of the background findings that ultimately led to the method of erasing X-ray interference and realignment to the person's own Vivaxis.

Bones are composed largely of hard mineral crystals and appear to have much in common magnetically with crystals. Referring to an article on crystals in the Scientific American, the July 1966 issue:

If the electrons are highly polarized and the solid has the right crystal structure, the local fields at each nuclear site will all be in the same direction. Therefore, the nuclei become polarized - as if they were in that same strong field.*

I feel we have ample justification for slanting our analysis on the permanent magnetic alignment and, in order to further substantiate it, we are going to detail shortly the method used when wrong magnetic messages in bones were corrected to right magnetic messages.

We all hear and read pros and cons with regard to X-rays. A recent article on the "pro" side was entitled, "Medical Expert Says X-rays Are Harmless". They use themselves as examples of having annual X-rays of chest, etc., and finalize by suggesting that they, themselves, are perfectly healthy and unharmed. It is largely relative, and we may ask, "Does 'perfectly healthy' include periodic backaches, sinus trouble, annual colds, perhaps a little twinge of arthritis, the odd headache, nervous tension, and increasing eye strain?" A great many people of middle age today would think they were very healthy if that was all they had wrong with them. These are generally regarded as only normal complaints, common to nearly everyone and are consequently accepted as such. A few years ago, I admit that I was no different from many, with my acceptance of aches and miscellaneous upsets which I, too, regarded at the time as normal. However, I now realize that we should not accept these as normal, and further, it is generally within our atomic power to adjust them all. These are adjustments that both my husband and I have largely achieved and we can now enjoy each day fully, without the use of medical drugs - unhampered by the threat of any nagging pains, nervous tension, or other discomforts.

* Shapiro, Gilbert. "Polarized Accelerator Targets", Scientific American, July 1966.

The eyes can often act as a useful example of what conflicting fields of X-ray do to the muscles.

Try this test on yourself: select the very smallest written print that is possible for you to read without your glasses. While you are reading this, flex some of your X-rayed bones, e.g., if you have teeth and chest X-rays, champ your teeth together and, while breathing deeply, also press on a bone of the chest. Ninety per cent of the participants will, after a short interval of about eight seconds, be unable to read further. The print becomes confused and jumbled under the influence of the conflicting wave circuits. When the same test is conducted, after they have realigned the X-rayed bones to co-ordinate with their own energies, no difficulty is generally encountered in deciphering the same print. Corrections of teeth X-rays alone, not only help to gradually strengthen eye muscles, but sinus and all related respiratory troubles usually dissipate rapidly. Further, they dissipate suddenly enough to leave no doubt of the direct connection and the fundamental underlying cause.