Kate W. Baldwin, M.D., F.A.C.S
Former Senior Surgeon, Woman's Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa.
(Abstract of paper presented at the clinical meeting of the Section
on Eye, Ear,
Nose and Throat Diseases of the Medical Society of the State of
PA, held at the
Medico-Chirurgical Hospital, Philadelphia. October 12, 1926. Reprinted
from
the Atlantic Medical Journal of April 1927. )
In the effort to obtain relief from suffering, many of the more simple
but potent
measures have been overlooked while we have grasped at the obscure
and
complicated.
Sunlight is the basic source of all life and energy upon earth. Deprive
plant or
animal life of light, and it soon shows the lack and ceases to develop.
Place a seed
in the very best of soil or a human being in a palace, shut out the
light, and what
happens? Without food (in the usual sense of the term) man can live
many days;
without liquids a much shorter time; but not at all without the atmosphere
which
surrounds him at all times and to which he pays so little attention.
The forces on
which life mostly depends are placed nearly or quite beyond personal
control.
For centuries scientists have devoted untiring effort to discover means
for the relief
or cure of human ills and restoration of the normal functions. Yet
in neglected light
and color there is a potency far beyond that of drugs and serums.
In order that the whole body may function perfectly, each organ must
be a hundred
percent perfect. When the spleen, the liver, or any other organ falls
below normal,
it simply means that the body laboratories have not provided the required
materials
with which to work, either because they are not functioning as a result
of some
disorder of the internal mechanism, or because they have not been provided
with
the necessary materials. Before the body can appropriate the required
elements,
they must be separated from the waste matter. Each element gives off
a
characteristic color wave. The prevailing color wave of hydrogen is
red, and that of
oxygen is blue, and each element in turn gives off its own special
color wave.
Sunlight, as it is received by the body, is split into the prismatic
colors and their
combinations as white light is split by passage through a prism. Everything
on the
red side of the spectrum is more or less stimulating, while the blue
is sedative.
There are many shades of each color, and each is produced by a little
different
wave length. Just as sound waves are tuned to each other and produce
harmony or
discords, so color waves may be tuned, and only so can they be depended
on
always to produce the same results.
If one requires a dose of castor oil, he does not go to a drug-store
and request a
little portion from each bottle on the shelves. I see no virtue, then,
in the use of the
whole white light as a therapeutic measure when the different colors
can give what
is required without taxing the body to rid itself of that for which
it has no use, and
which may do more or less harm. If the body is sick it should be restored
with the
least possible effort. There is no more accurate or easier way than
by giving the
color representing the lacking elements, and the body will, through
its radioactive
forces [the aura], appropriate them and so restore the normal balance.
Color is the
simplest and most accurate therapeutic measure yet developed.
For about six years I have given close attention to the action of colors
in restoring
the body functions, and I am perfectly honest in saying that, after
nearly
thirty-seven years of active hospital and private practice in medicine
and surgery, I
can produce quicker and more accurate results with colors than with
any or all
other methods combined-and with less strain on the patient. In many
cases, the
functions have been restored after the classical remedies have failed.
Of course,
surgery is necessary in some cases, but the results will be quicker
and better if color
is used before and after operation. Sprains, bruises and traumata of
all sorts
respond to color as to no other treatment. Septic conditions yield,
regardless of the
specific organism. Cardiac lesions, asthma, hay fever, pneumonia, inflammatory
conditions of the eyes, corneal ulcers, glaucoma, and cataracts are
relieved by the
treatment.
The treatment of carbuncles with color is easy compared to the classical
methods.
One woman with a carbuncle involving the back of the neck from mastoid
to
mastoid, and from occipital ridge to the first dorsal vertebra, came
under color
therapy after ten days of the very best of attention. From the first
day of color
application, no opiates, not even sedatives, were required. This patient
was saved
much suffering, and she has little scar.
The use of color in the treatment of burns is well worth investigating
by every
member of the profession. In such cases the burning sensation caused
by the
destructive forces may be counteracted in from twenty to thirty minutes,
and it
does not return. True burns are caused by the destructive action of
the red side of
the spectrum, hydrogen predominating. Apply oxygen by the use of the
blue side of
the spectrum, and much will be done to relieve the nervous strain,
the healing
processes are rapid, and the resulting tissues soft and flexible.
In very extensive burns in a child of eight years of age there was almost
complete
suppression of urine for more than 48 hours, with a temperature of
105 to 106
degrees. Fluids were forced to no effect, and a more hopeless case
is seldom seen.
Scarlet was applied just over the kidneys at a distance of eighteen
inches for twenty
minutes, all other areas being covered. Two hours after, the child
voided eight
ounces of urine.
In some unusual and extreme cases that had not responded to other treatment,
normal functioning has been restored by color therapy. At present,
therefore, I do
not feel justified in refusing any case without a trial. Even in cases
where death is
inevitable, much comfort may be secured.
There is no question that light and color are important therapeutic
media, and that
their adoption will be of advantage to both the profession and the
people.
DINSHAH HEALTH SOCIETY
P O Box 707
Malaga NJ 08328 USA
(609) 692 - 4686
Web site: http://www.wj.net/dinshah/
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