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Mietek Wirkus:
School of bioenergy, The healing art by
Margaret Wirkus |

Uncommon
Touch by
Tom Harpur |

Cross Currents:
The Perils of Electropollution,
The Promise of Electromedicine by
Robert Becker, MD |
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The
Uncommon Touch:
An Investigation of Spiritual Healing
by Tom Harpur
"Bioenergy medicine is the transmission
of human energy from one person to another to improve his
or her health. It's a little like giving somebody with a weak
car battery a boost." –
Mietek Wirkus, bioenergy healer
"What we have seen and measured in
our laboratory (as healers have been tested while healing)
is not possible. But it happens anyway!"
– Elmer E. Green, Ph.D.,
Director Emeritus, Center for Applied Psychophysiology, Menninger
Clinic
The first time I covered a large healing service as a journalist,
not long after becoming religion editor of the Toronto
Star in 1971, the healer was the late Kathryn Kuhlman.
(She died in 1976.) Kuhlman, one of the best-known of all
the American television healers — she was seen weekly
on more than fifty stations at the time — is dismissed
by James Randi in about half a page of his book "The
Faith Healers." In an accusation, unsupported by any
evidence, he credits her with inventing the "sit-'em-in-a-wheelchair"
gimmick. I can only say I saw no evidence of that or any other
kind of deception or fraud at her Toronto services.
I would like to record here the impression she made upon me
at that time. Here is the reason. The service was announced
for a Sunday afternoon at the O'Keefe Center, one of Toronto's
largest auditoriums. Normally, it seats about a thousand people.
However, that day it was crammed to the doors and there was
still such a crowd outside it was decided to hold two services.
As soon as the first ended, the hall emptied and then promptly
filled to capacity again.
A frail-looking, almost ethereal figure, in her flowing gown
with its long, filmy cape, Kuhlman nevertheless radiated enormous
energy as she single-handedly held her audiences spellbound
for nearly four hours. It was a feat of endurance few actors
or other performers could sustain in their prime. I was given
permission to watch the proceedings from the wings, where
I was out of sight yet only a few feet from her. I watched
carefully as she spoke and as she laid her hands on those
who wished to come up and receive her blessing or special
healing. She never actually touched any of the many hundreds
who came up row after row; she simply held her hands a few
inches from their foreheads and asked God to heal them. As
she did, many of them collapsed for a few moments as if poleaxed.
This included some nuns in full, traditional habit, and a
number of robust men.
Since the healees left the stage by stairs beside where I
was standing, I was able to ask some of them why they had
gone up and why they had suddenly fallen to the floor. Several
of them said they had no idea. They were accompanying friends
or had come out of curiosity. They had had no intention of
going up to the front until the invitation was made. As far
as the matter of being "slain in the Spirit" was
concerned (this is the term given by Pentecostals and others
to the phenomenon of slumping, apparently stunned, under the
"touch of power"), they were totally mystified.
When I asked one particularly burly man why he had lain down
on stage for all to see, he looked embarrassed and said he
didn't know. "I suddenly just felt my knees buckle, and
when I came to I was on the floor."
Obviously, one could speculate endlessly about the likelihood
of mass hypnotism, mass hysteria, or whatever being at work
in all of it. It's not impossible; but I detected no evidence.
Since that time I have attended or watched many healing crusades
with a lot more emotion and evident manipulation than occurred
there. Anyone, for example, who has seen the ubiquitous Florida-based
television healer Benny Hinn in action, knows what I mean.
In any case, when the first session was over and the second
had not yet begun, there was an interval during which Kuhlman
remained on the stage. Quite suddenly she turned around and
walked over to me. She had been told I would be there from
the Star and had given her approval earlier by phone. As she
came towards me, she spoke my name and, holding out her hands,
took both of mine. As she smiled up at me, she said, "Welcome,"
and kept her grip while we exchanged a few words.
I will never forget the experience. The nearest I can come
to describing it is to say that it was like holding onto the
terminals of a strong battery or being plugged into some other
source of electrical current. There was an unmistakable —
and, for me, quite unexpected — surge of an electric-like
current into my hands and up my arms. At six feet four inches
in height, I towered over this elderly, petite woman. Yet
she seemed at the center of a force or energy field that was
palpably alive and much stronger than I was. It's the particular
task of a journalist to write about events as objectively
as possible. Whatever the explanation, the facts of that encounter
are exactly as I have just described.
Sceptics would likely say that this and all similar experiences
at the hands of healers — for example, the sensations
often experienced and attested to by those prayed over and
touched by Godfrey Mowatt or Oskar Estebany — are self-generated
because of certain expectations or because of the effects
of hypnotism. I used to have considerable sympathy with that
point of view myself, until it happened to me. But, in light
of the published results of scientific experiments, the old
arguments about such experiences being "purely subjective"
have to be abandoned anyhow.
We have already seen how the experiments of Dr. Bernard Grad,
Dolores Krieger, and those following their lead have removed
any doubt that there is a "healer effect" that can
be scientifically demonstrated. We come now to a slightly
different approach that validates the same point in a singularly
convincing fashion. I'm referring to ten years of solid research
with over a dozen well-known healers carried out at the Menninger
Clinic's Center for Applied Psychophysiology by Drs. Elmer
Green, Robert Becker, and Steven L. Fahrion.
I'm going to focus on one healer, a remarkable man by the
name of Mietek Wirkus, because I have had the pleasure of
meeting him and observing him at work over a period of several
days during a conference in London, England. Mietek Wirkus
is in his late forties, slim, of medium height, with dark
hair and a quiet, unassuming manner. Although he was born
and spent most of his life in Poland, where he eventually
became licensed as a bioenergy therapist, working co-operatively
with doctors at a medical clinic, he and his wife, Margaret,
now teach and practice healing in Bethesda, Maryland. Their
non-profit center is called the Wirkus Bioenergy Foundation.
He has been and continues to be the subject of a number of
scientific studies both by researchers at the Menninger Clinic
and elsewhere in the United States.
Wirkus's natural talents as a healer became evident before
he was five years old, he told a large gathering of doctors,
clergy, researchers, and healers at the London conference.
Wirkus's older sister had begun to suffer from severe asthma
attacks, but whenever Mietek attempted to soothe her with
his hands, she would quite suddenly recover. His parents told
their doctor about this, who one day witnessed it himself.
The physician at once took a great interest in the child and
eventually asked him to come to his surgery and assist him
with certain patients. Wirkus says that when he was young
he often used to feel a patient's illness as a pain or illness
in his own body. But, as he grew older, he learned how to
protect himself and to feel the disease only in the energy
field of the other person.
Later, he was instructed in breathing techniques and meditation
by a monk steeped in the Tibetan tradition of healing. According
to Mietek — and all those who share a bioenergy approach
to healing — there is, surrounding the physical body,
an etheric body which is a kind of double of the physical
body. It is an energy field, silverish in colour, that flows
all around the physical body and is about three or four inches
in depth — at approximately the limit of where you can
detect the body's warmth. There is, as well, a third energy
field or "body," which is called the astral or magnetic
body.
It can best be described as an aura-like, egg-shaped cocoon
around each of us. This is something anyone can train himself
to see, he explained, and appears as shimmering flashes of
colour, usually within the range of blue. Those familiar with
Kirlian photography, of course, and subsequent refinements
of the art, know that researchers have long ago demonstrated
the reality of the human aura and the way it can be seen to
change as the individual's mood or energy shifts. (The concept
of a human aura itself goes back to earliest times, and may
well account not just for the halos painted by early Christians
around the heads of saints and other holy persons but also
for the strange emanations drawn or painted around the forms
of god-like figures in many pre-literate cultures.)
The "Kirlian effect," the reality of flares of "pulsating,
multi-coloured lights" surrounding the human body and
ebbing and flowing according to the health and vital energy
of the individual, gets its name from a brilliant electronics
expert from Krasnodar in the south of Russia. Semyon Kirlian
and his journalist wife, Valentina, after more than twenty
years of painstaking research and refinement, from 1939 onwards,
succeeded in perfecting an entirely new method of photography
— it involved fourteen fresh patents — which made
it possible to "see" not just the human aura but
the auras of other living things; for example, that of a leaf.
At first, the photography could only reveal static images
of the various energy fields. But soon the Kirlians added
a new optical device that enabled them to watch this amazing
phenomenon in action. In their book, Psychic Discoveries behind
the Iron Curtain, Sheila Ostrander and Lynn Schroeder describe
what the Kirlians saw: "The hand itself looked like the
Milky Way in a starry sky. Against a background of blue and
gold, something was taking place in the hand that looked like
a fireworks display. Multi-coloured flares lit up, then sparks,
twinkles, flashes. By 1949, the Kirlians' work had attracted
wide attention and a steady stream of scientists began to
show up at their small one-story house in Krasnodar. Ostrander
and Schroeder write that over the next thirteen years, hundreds
of scholars came —"biophysicists, doctors, biochemists,
electronics experts, criminology specialists" —
together with hordes of the idly curious.
The Kirlians discovered, as their technique became more sophisticated,
that the high-frequency photography was actually capable of
showing up disease in plants, animals, and humans. There were
discernible differences in the force or energy fields according
to the organism's health. More recently, researchers at UCLA's
Health Sciences Department, working with Kirlian photography
techniques, have photographed healers before and after their
hearings. "These showed that the aura or electric corona
around the healer shrank after a laying-on of hands, while
that of the healee expanded. While I watched Mietek Wirkus
engaged in healing, I was struck forcibly by several things:
* I could detect absolutely no sign of his breathing from
his chest or of facial movements, yet there was an extraordinary
sound as he did the very shallow, high-energy breathing he
has been taught to use both to enable him to project his own
bioenergy to the healee and to replenish it without fatigue
(when he worked in the Polish clinic, he gave therapy to from
eight to one hundred patients a day).
* He never actually touches the healee. Instead, he "reads"
or follows the outline, first of the etheric body and then
of the astral or magnetic body. Since the latter reflects
the emotions, according to the theory, and extends much farther
than the etheric body, especially at the widest part of its
egg-shaped form, Wirkus feels or senses it with his hands
at a distance of from two to four feet from the healee.
* Once he detects where the energy concerned is out of balance,
congested, static, or weak, he concentrates on that general
area.
I could at this point list a series of medically attested
healing that demonstrate Mietek Wirkus's results. For example,
I have seen the evidence and witnessed the corroborating testimony
of the parents of three very young children — one with cataract
which threatened blindness, one with chronic cardiac problem
(four open-chest operations in the year between the ages of
two and-a-half and three-and-a-half), and one with uncontrollable
epileptic seizures (more than a hundred a day) — where
the healer intervention made a dramatic difference. But, rather
than go into further details of that kind, I will turn to
what interests me most for our purposes about Wirkus, which
is not so much his own theories or even the results of his
healing, but rather the scientific finding and the views of
the researchers who have made him the subject o their hi-tech
scrutiny.
This man has spent more hours rigged up by wires to state
of-the-art machines than any other healer I know. The results
have been quite mind-boggling. Isolated from all extraneous
electrical and other influences in a laboratory room with
copper walls Wirkus was meticulously monitored as he carried
out his healing on a series of healees. In addition to the
kind of changes in the brain waves of both healer and healee
found in the experiments of Dolores Krieger, Dr. Elmer Green
and Professor Fahrion of the Menninger Clinic recorded sudden
electrical surges in Wirkus that on a number of occasions
registered eighty volts or more. These surges were synchronous
with times when the healer (who was not at all surprised by
the findings), in his own words, "was just conscious
of creating a charge and sending it." As Green says,
creating an electrical force of that magnitude "isn't
really possible. But it happens!" Green notes that in
China and Japan the traditional healing wisdom says the bioenergy
of a healer comes forth from the abdomen, while in India and
Tibet it's believed to come from the "third eye"
or the part of the forehead just above the eyes and centered
on the nose, and says that the next step in his research will
be to try to pinpoint the source of the electrical flow from
Wirkus. It may well be, he thinks, that the ancient yogic
belief that there are energy-field centers at the "third
eye," the throat, the heart, abdomen, and so on —
the chakras — will shortly be proven scientifically.
Green says the fact that voltage surges occur in proven healers
will one day not seem so surprising: "After all, we are
electrical beings or entities. There's not a single atom,
molecule, or cell where there isn't an electric charge. Indeed,
if you want to think of it that way, we're really an electromagnetic
cloud. All of nature is electromagnetic and electricity in
motion." What particularly impresses Green about non-medical
healing is that it works so well with babies and young children.
"Doctors often see the results of healers and are impressed,
but they go on to attribute them to the placebo effect. Well,
if you can affect the body of a horse, a dog, or a baby and
bring about physiological changes — as many of these healers
can — that's certainly not just a placebo!"
Dr. Robert Becker, author of The Body Electric and
professor of orthopedics at the State University of New York,
has spent the last thirty years researching how the body heals
itself. He believes that studying such healers as Mietek Wirkus
can open a whole new path and paradigm for medicine. He's
convinced that what the physician of today is trying to do
with drugs and surgery is what the traditional shaman or healer
has done without either throughout history. He says categorically
that if the healer phenomenon is real, and his research has
convinced him that it is, then there is a mechanism in the
human organism that permits things to happen "that we
cannot do with surgery or drugs." If this information
can be made more widely available to medicine "it would
markedly change the scope and efficiency of the medical care
process." Not to mention the cost!
Becker says that because of the kind of experiments done at
the Menninger Clinic and elsewhere, many scientists are now
ready to concede that there are biological effects from electromagnetic
energies. They know something real happens in healing, because
they have now seen not just the results but also the electrical
side effects. But how it works is as yet unclear. Becker,
Green, and those who share their views believe that the search
for the mechanism behind this, if successful, will revolutionize
medical understanding and practice. According to Becker, "Later
in history, this will be judged to have been the primary discovery
of the twentieth century, I believe; that is, that the human
organism is sensitive to electro-magnetic fields, that it
produces its own magnetic fields, that electrical currents
flow through the organism, and that in all of this we are
part of the living process of the entire cosmos."
Becker stresses his conviction that there is much more to
the human brain "than the way a computer works,"
and there is much more to the human body "than you'd
assume to have occurred as a result of a chance aggregation
of molecules." To those who respond that at this point
he's beginning to sound quasi-religious, he replies: "I
can't help it. I'm sorry but I have to view it that way. I
think medicine should realize that we know next to nothing
at present about how living things really work." (We
don't even understand yet how to cure the common cold!) He
is certain, as a result of his research, that there is some
kind of information transfer between a healee and a traditional
healer like Wirkus. The healer's awareness of what is going
on in the other person's energy field shows that "information
has been moved, and that can only happen when you have a reality,
a signal of some kind. My bet is that it is carried by electromagnetic
energy." We are more than a "cellophane bag filled
with a mild salt solution," Becker declares. We're not
just a biochemical entity. "There is something else!"
Dr. Green agrees with this, and believes that in the transfer
of information of which Becker speaks, "consciousness
is somehow involved." He admits to not knowing precisely
how all of this works yet — "obviously if information
is transmitted through some kind of energy it is different
from the energy, say, of a light bulb which grows weaker as
it extends further away.... It's a little more like a letter
that arrives just as it was sent. How else can one explain
heating at a distance?" Becker's comment on this is to
say that if you suppose the existence of a kind of "sixth
sense" and say that living organisms are sensitive to
magnetic fields and capable of receiving information through
them, then you have the beginnings of a theory that could
explain not just spiritual heating but also such paranormal
phenomena as extra-sensory perception and telepathy.
Significantly, shortly after I first wrote this paragraph,
a Cornell University psychologist, Daryl Bem, told the 1993
annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement
of Science that he now has evidence that extra-sensory perception
actually exists. He reported that a statistical review of
nearly forty studies had provided him with convincing and
repeatable results. Bem said his work, done with his late
colleague, Charles Honorton of the University of Edinburgh,
avoided the flaws of earlier studies. He is certain "we're
seeing a genuine scientific anomaly here."
Becker has issued a radical call to the scientific community
to expand and deepen its analysis of what is going on in the
healer phenomenon, because "the next step, not just in
medicine but in understanding all living things and knowing
who and what we are in relation to the universe, depends upon
it." But what do medical doctors make of the bioenergy
approach of such healers as Mietek Wirkus and the views of
such scientists as Green and Becker?
I met Dr. Ursula Thunberg, a child psychiatrist with the Jewish
Board of Family and Children Services in New York, while I
attended a day-long workshop featuring Mietek and Margaret
Wirkus in London. Thunberg has been trained in bioenergy healing
at the Wirkus Bioenergy Foundation in Bethesda. She says she
found the studies as technical and systematic as anything
she faced at medical school. She is convinced that healers
are "aware of an aspect of life that's very natural and
that follows specific laws." It must follow natural laws,
she argues, even though we don't know exactly what they are
yet, because "you do it and you get results." Thunberg
says that because bioenergy lies outside most people's normal
sensory and visual range, little has been said about it until
now by doctors and scientists. But, with the new research,
its existence is not in doubt, she says. "We are only
lacking a new paradigm at this point to organize the data
into a frame of reference that is intellectually or scientifically
acceptable to us." In her view, recognition by conventional
medicine that the bioenergy dimension exists and is part of
the healing process is "just around the corner."
Another medical doctor who endorses this approach is Irene
Seeland. Dr. Seeland notes that self-healing is a natural
part of life and that bioenergy "strengthens and enhances
the body's ability to attain wholeness." She deplores
those who try to put down and disparage mainstream modern
medicine because she knows it can accomplish many good and
important things. But, she adds, "Unfortunately, we can't
screen out all the side effects [for example, of chemotherapy,
radiation, or certain powerful drugs] and the poor body is
often devastated by these, with the result that natural healing
is hindered. That doesn't happen with bioenergy because it's
natural and authentic."
Margaret Wirkus, who has a better command of English than
her husband and often acts as his interpreter when being interviewed
by the media or medical researchers, says modern medicine
too often forgets that healing is ultimately an art and not
merely a matter of technology. She cites the maxim of Chinese
healing that the human organism is not a "dead body"
but a complex vortex of living energy that exists on many
levels — some of which we can't see. "The more narrow
our focus is, and the more purely technical it is, the less
humanistic it becomes," she says. That, precisely, is
the problem faced by hi-tech medical care today. The bioenergy
proponents believe they have discovered a way to challenge
and overcome this defect. As Dr. Becker puts it, "We
need to move medicine away from the idea of 'you come to me
and I'll heal you' to what it should be; i.e., 'you come to
me and I will help you heal yourself."'
The most carefully documented results of bioenergy healing
that I have seen personally, were presented at the Doctor-Healer
Conference in London in 1992 by a former colleague of Wirkus
from Warsaw, Poland. Stefania Szantyr-Powolny, M.D., who,
in addition to being a doctor has been practicing bioenergy
healing for twelve years, said that bioenergy therapy began
to be accepted in Poland around I978 and was given official
approval as a supplement to conventional medicine in 1982
Since then she has been dividing her time between the Medical
Scientific Institute in Warsaw and the bioenergy section of
a Polish institute known as the Psychotronic Society, which
was formed in the early 1980s to organize training and examine
the abilities of bioenergy healers.
Part of Dr. Szantyr-Powolny's practice has included the clinic
of the Society for Deaf Children in Warsaw, a clinic in which
Mietek Wirkus also spent much of his time before emigrating
to the United States. Describing the team approach used at
the clinic, she said that it was the best example of co-operation
between medical staff and healers she has ever encountered.
Specialists examined and treated the children, using all the
latest technology, and then referred them for bioenergy treatment.
After several sessions of therapy, the children were tested
with audiometers and other relevant devices. In this way,
the specialists were able to make objective assessments of
the results.
The doctor then described the case histories of children of
various ages and with a wide range of diagnoses. The slides
and audiograms of their before and after tests revealed some
major, well-nigh miraculous improvements. There was the case
of a six year-old girl who was born deaf. Five months after
the doctor began her bioenergy treatments, the child had gained
near-normal levels of hearing. Another case involved a young
man whose hearing had been almost totally destroyed by excessive
amounts of streptomycin administered when he was only two
years old. She said, "On his fourth visit for bioenergy
therapy I was truly moved when he came in and told me, 'Doctor,
I can hear again! I can hear water running in the bathroom;
I can hear my mother making dinner; I can hear dogs barking.'
Could anything be more satisfying and rewarding?"
The most striking thing in many of these cases is that "the
improvement of the hearing is connected with the perception
of the high tones, she commented. "This means that we
are improving the inner ear. Conventional medicine was completely
helpless in such cases." She added that with the specialists
she had come to the tentative conclusion that part of the
answer to what was happening might lie in the possibility
that the biotherapy was prompting the development of the central
nervous system. But exact explanations remain elusive stilt.
The final word must go to Mietek and Margaret Wirkus. They
know from long experience that people have been and are being
healed through Mietek's and other healers' bioenergy therapy.
They explain, "What is of greatest importance is the
healee's will to live. The bioenergy then supplies renewed
energy for the body to heal itself It's not a case of this
type of healing helping some problems and not being appropriate
for others. It stimulates the body's own mechanisms for healing
itself — the immune system and other systems — and so it is
a help in all fields and at all levels of the organism — mental,
emotional, and physical. Once people get even one treatment,
they say it's as if the clouds have moved away and their life
feels as though it is taking on colour again."
I had just completed this chapter in its final form when I
obtained copy of Bill Moyers' book Healing and the Mind,
the companion the five, part PBS television series of the
same name. For me, the most exciting chapter was the lengthy
interview with one of the world's leading authorities on brain
biochemistry, Dr. Candace Pert, visiting professor at the
Center for Molecular and Behavior Neuroscience at Rutgers
University (Pert discovered the opiate receptor and other
peptide receptors in the brain and in the body, thus explaining
the way chemicals travel between mind and body.)
In the chapter "The Chemical Communications", Pert
talks about the human organism as a mind-spirit-body unity
and about how "information is flowing among these aspects
continually." The messenger molecules are called neuropeptides.
The mind, she points out, is not just located above the neck
but exists in every living cell because of these messengers.
She then goes on to discuss with Moyers the conviction she
and other neuroscientists have that the ultimate mystery here,
how the various parts of our body "spontaneously"
receive and transmit messages of all kinds, will only be solved
in terms of "a form of energy" of some type as yet
not fully known: "Clearly there's another form of energy
that we have not yet understood. For example, there's a form
of energy that appears to leave the body when the body dies."
Pert goes on to say she would call this energy "spirit"
except that scientists ever since Descartes have felt they
have to avoid such a term. But, she admits, the traditional
habit of thinking of the organism as just a machine (reductionism)
leaves too many phenomena unexplained. She makes it absolutely
clear that the idea that the healing process can be explained
in terms of chemical and electrical processes without "invoking
some other energy" no longer makes any sense to her.
In her view, the only way forward will involve "a realm
we don't understand at all yet"; an external energy belonging
to the "realm of spirit and soul." That's precisely
what this chapter has been all about.
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