Color Therapy and the Healing of Pets
Posted on August 12, 2009 by Nancy Houser
When natural healthcare practitioners work with color therapy, they are addressing the body’s “etheric body”. When working with pets, the invisible part of the pet’s body that is being worked on is their vital or “energy body”. By improving in this area, their body’s self-healing aspect will be able to encourage the body to repair itself quicker and better.

"Will the blue hat make me feel better or should I wear green?"
Several natural healing fields address this area —Reiki, crystals, acupuncture, therapeutic touches, flower or oil essences, homeopathy and color therapy – with all free from adverse side effects. Also, they are much cheaper than traditional forms of medical care even though in certain cases (broken bones, poisonings, being run over, etc) a vet should always be notified immediately.
CELLULAR LEVELS OF COLOR HEALING
Color therapy can have a profound effect on a body’s cellular level, noticed by color filters of camera lens changing the behavior of its cells. Photobiologist John Ott, PhD, found that camera lens color changes had more of an effect on the body’s cells than pharmaceutical drugs did.
On the other hand, prolonged color exposure to one color has caused abnormal developments in their body during animal research — fur loss, cataracts, problems in a female dog’s reproductive system, male sterility, abnormal bone development, toxic symptoms, severe increase or decrease in the animal’s body weight, and digestive disorders. But short term exposure was found to have the opposite effect on animals during scientific studies.
STUDIES ON COLOR THERAPY
In the late 1800s, color therapy studies in England found that different light exposures caused measurable improvements in the patients. As time went on over the years, scientists began to study color therapy and how it influenced health. Until the 1940s and 1950s, the United States has begun practicing color therapy on a massive level.
This changed about the time “lobbying efforts by conventional physicians convinced the U .S. Food and Drug Administration to make the use and sale of medical color projection equipment illegal.” Even today, traditional medical physicians associate color therapy with “fringe medicine.”
Next Wednesday (August 19, 2009) we will look how this “fringe medicine” had a history of uses in the United States, regardless of the medical community’s opinion. “Part II — Color Therapy and the Healing of Pets”.
RESOURCES
Color Us Well
Therapy in the ultrafine bioenergetics field
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