digipharm®
Home •  Site Map  •  Research  •  Reports  •  International Experts  •  Music Preparations  •  Fundamentals  •  News  •  Questions  •  Shop
digipharm®
THE HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF MEDICAL RESONANCE THERAPY MUSIC®
Medical Media Group: I have heard that you also have great suc­cess with your Medi­cal Reso­nance Ther­apy Mu­sic in Asia. The pub­lisher Aar Edi­tion sends regu­larly whole con­tainers with your medi­cal mu­sic prepa­ra­tions to Asia and par­ticu­larly to China.

Peter Hübner: In Taiwan there is the owner of sev­eral phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal com­pa­nies, who turned to us about 5 years ago for in­tro­duc­ing Medi­cal Reso­nance Ther­apy Mu­sic par­ticu­larly in Taiwan and China. At that time he bought a greater amount and had very dif­fer­ent in­ves­ti­ga­tions con­ducted: firstly in clas­si­cal Chi­nese medi­cine and sec­ondly in the very popu­lar Tai Chi and Qui Gong schools as well as in the Bud­dhist as­so­cia­tions, in other words: in the cir­cles of the prac­ti­tio­ners of the tra­di­tional martial arts and of the Zen-Mas­ters and of the monks con­cen­trat­ing on medi­ta­tion.

These in­ves­ti­ga­tions were ob­vi­ously a great suc­cess. The phar­ma­cist, who at the same time is also a kind of a mas­ter of Zen-medi­ta­tion in a very wide sense, told me later, when he vis­ited me again, that his mas­ter is the pre­sently liv­ing of­fi­cial rep­re­sen­ta­tive of one of the three old­est Chi­nese Shao Lin Tra­di­tions passed down since 5.000 years with­out in­ter­rup­tion from one mas­ter to the other. This mas­ter had the Medi­cal Reso­nance Ther­apy Mu­sic ex­am­ined in his school and found, that it mul­ti­plied the ef­fect of their Shao Lin Tech­niques many times: if so far he usu­ally needed 4 hours to reach a cer­tain level of life en­ergy, he now, with the help of Medi­cal Reso­nance Ther­apy Mu­sic would suc­ceed do­ing so in 45 min­utes.

This and cor­re­spond­ing state­ments of other mas­ters and schools had Medi­cal Reso­nance Ther­apy Mu­sic get going for the Chi­nese and thus, of course, the mar­ket for this new branch of medi­cine grew very fast in these more spiri­tu­ally ori­ented cir­cles – and still grows in­creas­ingly faster. The Asians, whose re­lig­ious­ness, as is known, has a very tol­er­ant char­ac­ter, are as open to the medi­ta­tive and reli­gious ef­fects of Medi­cal Reso­nance Ther­apy Mu­sic as our sci­en­tists of the West are open to its medi­cal ef­fects.

Prob­lems has, at the most, the lit­tle vil­lage theo­lo­gian of me­die­val char­ac­ter, who fears, that his flock runs away from his church ser­vice, in or­der to now go and get its reve­la­tion from Medi­cal Reso­nance Ther­apy Mu­sic.

More­over, a great wave of rec­og­ni­tion de­vel­ops in China from the field of clas­si­cal Chi­nese medi­cine, be­cause in­ves­ti­ga­tions there have shown, that the Medi­cal Reso­nance Ther­apy Mu­sic is 100% compatible with clas­si­cal Chi­nese medi­cine, or com­bines with it re­spec­tively – the ef­fect of acu­punc­ture is in­creased sig­nifi­cantly, for in­stance –, and that it there­fore pre­sents an ab­so­lutely ideal com­bi­na­tion or com­ple­ment. The in­ves­ti­ga­tions con­tinue: very wel­come news for the Chi­nese as for us.