Summary
Eileen McKusick explains biofield tuning to host Hilda on the Wise Traditions podcast, sharing case studies of how tuning forks can locate and resolve energetic distortions held in the body's electromagnetic field. She describes working with a client who went through a car windshield at age 18 and still carried the trauma decades later, demonstrating how the tuning fork acts as an "invisible ink decoder" that reveals areas of distortion in the biofield. McKusick covers how memories are stored in standing waves within the magnetic field that extends about six feet around the body, with specific emotions mapping to specific body zones. She shares stories of clients overcoming pain, depression, fibromyalgia, and creative blocks through biofield tuning, and explains how the body is a self-tuning instrument that uses the coherent input of the tuning fork to bring itself back into harmony. The episode also touches on the electrical nature of the human body and practical self-care approaches including singing, laughing, and cultivating present-moment awareness.
Key Points
- Tuning forks act as an "invisible ink decoder" that reveals distortions in the body's electromagnetic field through changes in tone and resistance
- Memories are stored chronologically in standing waves, with gestation at the outer boundary and recent events near the body
- Specific emotional patterns map to specific body zones: sadness off the left shoulder, people-pleasing off the right shoulder
- The body is a self-tuning instrument that uses the coherent input of the tuning fork to bring itself back into harmony
- Emotional energy has actual mass that can weigh down physical structures and cause psychosomatic pain
- Biofield tuning can unlock creativity, as demonstrated by a client who published children's books after a throat center adjustment
- Simple self-care practices like singing, laughing, and present-moment awareness can harmonize the biofield without tools
Key Moments
Memories stored as standing waves in the body's magnetic field
McKusick explains her discovery that memories are stored in standing waves within the magnetic field surrounding the body, organized chronologically with gestation at the outer boundary and recent events near the body surface.
"I found that they appear to be stored in standing waves, like magnetically encoded waveforms in the magnetic field that surrounds our body."
The tuning fork as invisible ink decoder for biofield distortions
McKusick describes how the tuning fork acts like an invisible ink decoder, with sound waves bouncing off the invisible territory of the biofield and returning with diagnostic information, similar to how an ultrasound works.
"And the tuning fork, so interestingly, acts almost like an invisible ink decoder. And as the sound waves bounce off of this invisible territory, they come back with information, just like an ultrasound."
How the body self-tunes using coherent sound input
McKusick explains the self-tuning mechanism: when a tuning fork reflects distortion back to the body, the organizing intelligence uses the coherent input to tune itself, releasing subconsciously held tension and restoring breath and harmony.
"The organizing intelligence will use that both the reflection and the steady, coherent input of the tuning fork to actually tune itself and bring its expression."
Emotional energy as a magnetic stylus moving debris through the field
McKusick describes how a tuning fork acts like a magnetic stylus that picks up emotional debris in the field and moves it from pileup zones into the central channel of the torus for circulation, demonstrated by resolving a widow's shoulder pain caused by accumulated grief.
"A tuning fork produces a weak electromagnetic charge and it becomes sort of like a magnetic stylus. I can pick up the iron filings of that emotional debris in the field and move it from the shoulder into the midline of the electrical system, into the central channel of the torus, where it goes into circulation."
The electrical nature of the human body explained
McKusick explains how the human body runs on electricity, from the heartbeat to brain waves to cell membrane function, and that the only difference between a living and dead body is the presence of that electrical charge.
"every cell membrane has to have a certain amount of electric current running across it in order for it to function. Like just like my laptop won't work unless it's"